Political Worship

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Table Of Contents
I. Worship As The Beginning Of Christian Ethics
1. Political Worship: Overcoming The Functional Approach
2. Worship As A Form Of Life: The Grammar Of Christian Life
3. Absorptions
4. Worship And Ethics: Their Traditional Correlation
II. Worship As The Critical Power Of Christian Ethics: Christian Citizens In A Torn And Divided World
I. Worship As The Praxis Of Reconciliation
1. The Political Dimension Of The Church: Modern And Postmodern
2. The Surmounting Of Political Antinomies In Worship
Ii. Worship Identity In (Post)modern Society
1. The Total Claim Of Society
2. The Worshipping Congregation As A True Public
III. Worship As Formative Power In Christian Ethics
1. Hearing In Community: The Political Power Of The Word
2. Consensus And Forgiveness
3. Homiletics As Political Propadeutics
4. Life Out Of Abundance

Additional Info
Description
How does Christian ethics begin? This pioneering study explores the grammar of the Christian life as it is embodied and learned in worship as the formative experience of the ‘fellow citizens of God’s people’. The book presents the first in-depth theological investigation of the phenomenon of ‘political worship’ by exposing the political nature of worship and the worship dimension of politics.

In a careful analysis of biblical and traditional conceptions of worship, Wannenwetsch demonstrates how the genuine political character of worship neutralizes attempts to politicize or de-politicize it. In the imprinting of the experience of divine reconciliation on the Christian body, worship challenges the deepest antagonisms of political theory and practice: antagonisms of ‘private and public’, ‘freedom and necessity’, and ‘action and contemplation’. At the same time, the ‘spill over’ of worship into every sphere of life instils a healthy suspicion of post-liberal conceptualizations of role-mobility. In the experience of ‘hearing in communion’, an encounter with a word that does not deceive announces the end of the rule of the hermeneutics of suspicion.

Further questions discussed include the conditions of true consensus, forgiveness as a political virtue, `political rhetoric’ between accountability and self-justification, how ‘reversible role-taking’ can avoid losing the otherness of the other, and how the rhetoric of ‘responsibility’ can be saved from hubris or depression. Particular practices or dimensions of worship (confession, preaching, praising, intercession, observance of holy days) are examined and their heuristic and formative potentials explored in relation to these topics. A special feature of the study is a strong ecumenical and international focus.

The book brings into conversation a variety of traditions (including Lutheran, Catholic, Anglican, and Orthodox) and contemporary voices. An original contribution to Christian ethics, the book addresses systematic and practical theology as well as political theory, while indicating the essential interpenetration of these disciplines.

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Description

SKU (ISBN): 9780199253876
ISBN10: 0199253870
Bernd Wannenwetsch | Translator: Margaret Kohl
Binding: Cloth Text
Published: July 2004
Publisher: Oxford University Press

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