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Colin Gunton and the Failure of Augustine

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A penetrating critique of Gunton's analysis of Augustine, illuminating Augustine's insight into the relationship between creation and redemption.The British systematic theologian Colin Gunton argue...
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  • 26 January 2012
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A penetrating critique of Gunton's analysis of Augustine, illuminating Augustine's insight into the relationship between creation and redemption.

The British systematic theologian Colin Gunton argued that Augustine bequeathed to the West a theological tradition with serious deficiencies. According to Gunton, Augustine’s particular construal of the doctrine of God led to fundamental errors and problems in grasping the relationship between creation and redemption, and in rightfully construing a truly Christian ontology. In Colin Gunton and the Failure of Augustine, Bradley G. Green’s close reading of Augustine challenges Gunton’s understanding.

Gunton argued that Augustine’s supposed emphasis of the one over the many severed any meaningful link between creation and redemption, contra the theological insights of Irenaeus, and furthermore that because of Augustine’s supposed emphasis on the timeless essence of God at the expense of the three real persons, he failed to forge a truly Christian ontology, effectively losing the insights of the Cappadocian Fathers). For all of Gunton’s many insights, Green argues that on the contrary, Augustine did not sever the link between creation and redemption, but rather affirmed that the created order is a means of genuine knowledge of God, that the created order is indeed the only means by which redemption is accomplished, that the cross of Christ is the only means by which we can see God, and that the created order is fundamentally oriented toward a telos – redemption. Concerning ontology, Augustine’s teaching on the imago Dei, and the prominent role that relationship plays in Augustine’s doctrines of man and God, provides the kind of relational Christian ontology that Gunton sought. In short, Green argues, Augustine could have provided Gunton key theological resources in countering the modernity he so rightfully challenged.
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Price: $29.99
Pages: 236
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: James Clarke
Publication Date: 26 January 2012
Trim Size: 9.02 X 5.98 in
ISBN: 9780227680056
Format: Paperback
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Bradley G. Green's book presents a picture of Augustine as an ally and resource to Gunton's trinitarian theology of creation, a renewed theological vision of truth that does justice to the concerns of modernity and offers a way forward that is free of some of the weaknesses of the Western tradition. (p. 7) [...] Green's book is an instructive reading and a serious accomplishment in the art of theological conversation with the Church Fathers and Mothers.
— Alfred H. Yuen

Green's study shows that thinking of the founders of the Christian doctrine, like Augustine, and their critics in the twentieth century, like Gunton, is relevant for the contemporary discourse and we - although we may not always agree with them- time and again should enter into dialogue with them.
— Anthony Dupont

...Challenges the late Colin Gunton's argument that Augustine bequeathed to the West a theological tradition with serious deficiencies...
— Lewis Ayres

Bradley G. Green challenges what he argues are misguided reading of Augustine, which are found in some interpretations of the divide between Western and Eastern theologies.
Foreword by Lewis Ayres
Acknowledgments
1 Colin Gunton and the Failure of Augustine
2 Creation and Redemption in the Theology of Colin Gunton
3 Being and Ontology in the Theology of Colin Gunton
4 Creation and Redemption in Augustine's De Trinitate
5 Being and Ontology in Augustine's De Trinitate
6 A Critique of Colin Gunton
7 Conclusion
Bibliography
Index