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Nationhood, Providence, and Witness - Israel in Modern Theology and Social Theory (Paperback, New)
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Nationhood, Providence, and Witness - Israel in Modern Theology and Social Theory (Paperback, New)
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Nationhood, Providence, and Witness argues that problems with
recognizing the State of Israel lie at the heart of approaches to
nationhood and unease over nationalism in modern Protestant
theology, as well as modern social theory. Three interrelated
themes are explored. The first is the connection between a
theologian's attitude to recognizing Israel and their approach to
the providential place of nations in the divine economy. Following
from this, the argument is made that theologians' handling of both
modern and ancient Israel are mirrored profoundly in the question
of recognition and ethical treatment of the nations to which they
belong, along with neighboring nations. The third theme is how
social theory, represented by certain key figures, has handled the
same issues. Four major theologians are discussed: Reinhold
Niebuhr, Rowan Williams, John Milbank, and Karl Barth. Alongside
them are placed social theorists and scholars of religion and
nationalism, including Mark Juergensmeyer, Philip Jenkins, Anthony
Smith, and Adrian Hastings. In the process, debates over the
relationship between theology and social theory are reconfigured in
concrete terms around the challenge of recognition of the State of
Israel as well as stateless nations. Carys Moseley studied Classics
and Theology at the Universities of Cambridge, Oxford, and
Edinburgh, and has taught Theology and Christian Ethics at the
University of Edinburgh. She is the author of Nations and
Nationalism in the Theology of Karl Barth (2013). 'Here is a lively
study of nationhood . . . that] will undoubtedly raise hackles,
provoke discussion and dissent. . . . Here is swashbuckling,
stimulating theology, which should be carefully studied not only by
theologians, but by people of many faiths, political and social
theorists, and ethicists. Alan P.F. Sell, author of 'Philosophy,
Dissent and Nonconformity' (2003) and 'Confessing the Faith
Yesterday and Today' (2013). Nationalism and the concept of
nationhood is something Christian theologians have shied away from.
The tragedy of the Holocaust, the European experience during the
twentieth century, and the fractious state of the Middle East
during the twenty-first have given us all pause for thought. On the
basis of a fresh understanding of Israel, Moseley tackles negative
attitudes toward the integrity of stateless nations and suggests
creative ways in which current missiology and theological ethics
can respond positively. D. Densil Morgan, Professor of Theology,
University of Wales Trinity Saint David
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