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This book offers a bold reading of Protestant tradition from a
rhetorical and literary perspective. Arguing that Protestant
thought is based in a rhetorical performance of authority. Hobson
draws on a wide range of modern and postmodern thought to defend
this account of rhetorical authority from various charges of
authoritarianism. With close readings of Augustine, Luther,
Kierkegaard and Barth, this book develops a new 'rhetorical
theology of the Word' and also a new critique of secular modernity,
with particular reference to modern literature and the thought of
Nietzsche. Confronting the related issues of rhetoric and
authority, Hobson provides a provocative account of modern theology
which offers new perspectives on theology's relationship to
literature and postmodern thought.
This title was first published in 2003:This book offers a bold
reading of Protestant tradition from a rhetorical and literary
perspective. Arguing that Protestant thought is based in a
rhetorical performance of authority, Hobson draws on a wide range
of modern and postmodern thought to defend this account of
rhetorical authority from various charges of authoritarianism. With
close readings of Augustine, Luther, Kierkegaard and Barth, this
book develops a new 'rhetorical theology of the Word' and also a
new critique of secular modernity, with particular reference to
modern literature and the thought of Nietzsche. Confronting the
related issues of rhetoric and authority, Hobson provides a
provocative account of modern theology which offers new
perspectives on theology's relationship to literature and
postmodern thought.
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Faith (Hardcover)
Theo Hobson
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R4,360
Discovery Miles 43 600
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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In "Faith", the theologian Theo Hobson explores the notion of faith
and the role it plays in our lives. He unpacks the concept to ask
whether faith is dependent on religion or whether it is also a
general secular phenomenon. In exploring this question Hobson
ranges widely over theology, philosophy, politics and psychology
and engages with the writings of Christian and atheist thinkers
alike. The book begins by considering attitudes to faith in recent
works of atheism. Hobson shows how Richard Dawkins and other
writers, while attacking faith in one sense, have exhibited faith
in another. The book goes on to explore the wider meaning of faith,
including our faith in free-market capitalism, the part faith plays
in democratic politics and the role faith has in our psychological
well-being. To understand the role of faith in modernity, Hobson
argues, we must attend to the specifically Christian concept of
faith. Hobson then returns to the religious meaning of faith by
exploring the account of faith in the Bible and charting the
tension between faith and reason in Christian thought. The final
chapter takes an autobiographical turn and relates how the author
came to take faith seriously and to question what Christians are
meant to have faith in. From the Old Testament story of Abraham to
the visionary poetry of W. B. Yeats, from the polemics of Luther to
the rhetoric of Barack Obama, the author presents us with a fresh
and illuminating meditation on the nature of faith. In doing so, he
reveals how trust and faith, the religious and secular, are utterly
entwined and how the attraction of religious faith outweighs the
intellectual difficulties it presents.
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Faith (Paperback)
Theo Hobson
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R1,165
Discovery Miles 11 650
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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In "Faith", the theologian Theo Hobson explores the notion of faith
and the role it plays in our lives. He unpacks the concept to ask
whether faith is dependent on religion or whether it is also a
general secular phenomenon. In exploring this question Hobson
ranges widely over theology, philosophy, politics and psychology
and engages with the writings of Christian and atheist thinkers
alike. The book begins by considering attitudes to faith in recent
works of atheism. Hobson shows how Richard Dawkins and other
writers, while attacking faith in one sense, have exhibited faith
in another. The book goes on to explore the wider meaning of faith,
including our faith in free-market capitalism, the part faith plays
in democratic politics and the role faith has in our psychological
well-being. To understand the role of faith in modernity, Hobson
argues, we must attend to the specifically Christian concept of
faith. Hobson then returns to the religious meaning of faith by
exploring the account of faith in the Bible and charting the
tension between faith and reason in Christian thought. The final
chapter takes an autobiographical turn and relates how the author
came to take faith seriously and to question what Christians are
meant to have faith in. From the Old Testament story of Abraham to
the visionary poetry of W. B. Yeats, from the polemics of Luther to
the rhetoric of Barack Obama, the author presents us with a fresh
and illuminating meditation on the nature of faith. In doing so, he
reveals how trust and faith, the religious and secular, are utterly
entwined and how the attraction of religious faith outweighs the
intellectual difficulties it presents.
|
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