With the Grain of the Universe/Christian Existence Today/The Hauerwas Reader

Berkman, John & Cartwright, Michael & Hauerwas, Stanley & Hauerwas, Stanley

HOW CATHOLIC IS HE? With the Grain of the Universe The Church's Witness and Natural Theology Stanley Hauerwas Brazos Press, $22.99,256 pp. Christian Existence Today Essays on Church, World, and...

...Of course, Hauerwas is never boring, sometimes gracing the reader with entertaining asides and histories, especially in the extensive footnotes (see pp...
...Hauerwas claims he will not become Catholic because his wife's ordination would not be valid, but it is precisely that kind of issue where the rubber hits the road...
...Reinhold Niebuhr's Gifford lectures, published as The Nature and Destiny of Man, dress up James's pragmatism in biblical language, but in the process, Hauerwas claims, Niebuhr drains Christology of any real transformative power...
...According to Hauerwas, America and Catholicism are not quite as compatible as we like to think...
...Barth offers a God who makes claims on humans, who tells us who we are and what the true nature of the world around us is...
...He lives in Cabbagetown, Georgia.es in Cabbagetown, Georgia...
...James essentially turns theology into social psychology, rendering God but a subjective cog in an ethical system based on reason and experience...
...The argument takes the form of a narrative recounting Lord Gifford's purposes in founding the lectures and how three of the subsequent lecturers fulfilled or rejected his intentions...
...They have written at length to persuade America that Catholicism can work with a liberal democracy, and they have worked hard to make Catholics key contributors to the American public conversation...
...The generation of Christian ethicists now dominant in Catholic universities are the intellectual heirs of John Courtney Murray...
...Religious experience, for James, is a motivating force operating in support of a pragmatic humanism...
...Christian Existence Today Essays on Church, World, and Living in Between Stanley Hauerwas Brazos Press, $l9.99,271pp The Hauerwas Reader Edited by John Berkman and Michael Cartwright Duke University Press, $27.95...
...He also displays his usual penchant for the one-liner, a habit at once amusing and infuriating...
...This collection contains a number of important "programmatic" essays, including the popular "A Tale of Two Stories: On Being a Christian and a Texan," and the oft-cited "A Christian Critique of Christian America...
...35-36 to learn how the invention of the clock marginalized the church...
...Nonetheless, Hauerwas's vision of the church's role in the world is compelling and challenging, and after reading him, one cannot but wonder if we have become all too respectable...
...The peaceful witness of the church may seem out of step with human experience of the world, but it ultimately proves itself "with the grain of the universe" (a phrase borrowed from John Howard Yoder) as created by the Trinitarian God known in Christ...
...That fact speaks to a broader issue, made clear when Hauerwas writes that Barth "cannot acknowledge that the community called the church is constitutive of the gospel proclamation...
...Those seeking an introduction to Hauerwas's work have recently been offered two good resources...
...He sums up James's New England religious environment as "Calvinism shorn of Calvin's Christ"-a phrase he has used in the past to more-or-less accurately describe the work of his teacher, James Gustafson...
...Here, Hauerwas essentially calls Barth- and, by extension, all of Reformed theology, including Niebuhr and arguably Yoder-to task for being something he is not, namely Catholic...
...This book, the published version of the 2001 Gifford Lectures in Natural Theology, challenges the claim that theology and Christian morality are intelligible when separated from the doctrine of the church...
...Most important here is the introduction, in which Hauerwas answers those critics who label him "sectarian": "Show me where I am wrong about God, Jesus, the limits of liberalism, the nature of the virtues, or the doctrine of the church, but do not shortcut that task by calling me a sectarian...
...The only "proof" necessary is to be found in the lives of faithful witnesses such as Yoder, John Paul II, and Dorothy Day...
...In presenting James and Niebuhr, Hauerwas seems genuinely appreciative of the intellectual achievements of those with whom he disagrees...
...Given his particularistic assumptions, Hauerwas would no doubt say it is up to properly formed Christians to figure out such things for themselves...
...Until the familiar Hauerwasian catch phrases are given more depth, the ecclesial fence-sitting remains a problem...
...One is the Brazos Press reprint of Christian Existence Today, originally published in 1988...
...To reject the latter is to be Catholic, and it is by no means clear that one can be "a little bit" Catholic without buying into the entire package...
...Nonetheless, the story as a whole holds together and serves as a challenge to those who hold forth natural law as an autonomous source of moral authority when separated from the revealed doctrines of the church...
...Hauerwas recounts how William James's The Varieties of Religious Experience fulfilled Gifford's intentions...
...730 pp Mark E. Gammon Stanley Hauerwas is a threat to American Catholicism, but it depends on whom you ask whether that is such a bad thing...
...At issue is whether ultimate authority lies with the church itself, institutionally or otherwise conceived, or with the Word given by God in part as a judge on the flawed human institution, as the Reformed tradition requires...
...In contrast to Niebuhr, the hero of Hauerwas's story is Karl Barth, who insists that any attempt to derive God from human experience or scientific means is bound to be but a reflection of human needs and desires...
...With the Grain of the Universe is Hauerwas's most important work yet for those concerned with such matters...
...One would think that a theologian properly formed by the gospel narrative might refer to its specifics more often...
...In the meantime, Stanley Hauerwas, no fan of natural law, keeps churning Catholic theologians out of the Duke graduate program...
...Hauerwas writes often of the importance of Scripture and the stories it contains for our moral formation, but the scriptural index for this 700-page tome comes in at just over a page, and that due to judicious use of white space...
...Through this story, which includes detailed and illuminating accounts of the three lecturers' lives and work, Hauerwas sets up his own position, namely that the God revealed to us through Scripture and church shows us the true nature of the universe...
...This book offers all one could hope for in such a volume, including a helpful introduction by John Berkman that points to the essays addressing different topics of interest, and a readers' guide that both summarizes essays not contained in the Reader and displays something of the evolution of Hauerwas's thought through the years...
...Also included is William Ca-vanaugh's superb biographical appreciation of the personality in question...
...Christ becomes an ethical ideal so lofty that to try to reach it inevitably results in the sin of pride...
...Still, he often leaves the folks in the pews hanging with regard to what they actually should do...
...Hauerwas's own work suggests that we should know more about the lives of our theologians, and Cavanaugh provides just that, though anyone who knows Hauerwas will recognize that some of his more entertaining and colorful turns of phrase have been omitted...
...In particular, Catholic theologians have offered natural law as a nonsectarian conceptual tool to give liberalism more of a moral backbone...
...God is all about the fulfillment of human need, but humans must be properly humble and chastened with regard to what is possible...
...Past readers of Hauerwas will find the book a bit of a departure, in that it is a sustained argument rather than a collection of essays...
...Though the work is atypically academic in tone, the usual Hauerwas virtues and vices are to be found...
...A collection of such scope invites assessment of the body of work as a whole, and there are some shortcomings...
...Hauerwas notoriously eschews "applied ethics," arguing that the secular framing of common issues limits the moral imagination, and he puts his own considerable imagination to work re-framing issues and reassessing priorities...
...That essay and three others from the same collection also appear in The Hauerwas Reader, a career-spanning collection edited by his former students...
...Fair enough, but his work would be exponentially enriched by more attention to pastoral matters...
...candidate in theological ethics at Boston College...
...Mark E. Gammon is a Ph.D...
...Hauerwas and his former students call the church to rethink its priorities, to reframe moral and political questions in a way that addresses the church rather than society as a whole...
...Here it is more pithy than accurate...
...Informed by epistemological presuppositions of the Scottish Enlightenment, Gifford wanted the lectures to enrich our understanding of God through natural or scientific means...

Vol. 129 • January 2002 • No. 2


 
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