This remarkable study articulates a Korean Confucian-Christian theory of human nature-theory of justification, sanctification, and salvation by means of a reformed concept of filial piety. The book investigates in depth the theological anthropology of Robert C. Neville and the inclusive humanism of Tu Wei-ming. Neville and Tu represent contemporary Christian and Confucian approaches to religious anthropology. Furthermore, they have engaged in an extended and productive dialogical encounter on the themes of comparative thought and religious renewal in Asia and North America. This book argues that Neville's and Tu's insights into human nature have great relevance for a comparative, contemporary Korean theology by focusing on the role of a reformed version of filial piety as a new component of Korean theology. The articulation of filial piety as a potential key of contemporary Korean theology is an example of creative appropriation of a Confucian theme of the Christian praxis of sanctification, and ultimately the soteriology of divine grace and transformation. This study construes human nature to be such that any living theology will reflect the creative engagement of Christian theologians as public intellectuals in search of the articulation of the gospel.
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Verlagsort
Maße
Höhe: 206 mm
Breite: 132 mm
Dicke: 24 mm
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ISBN-13
978-0-7618-2944-7 (9780761829447)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Jung Sun Oh is a part-time professor in the School of Theology at Boston University. Professor Oh holds a Th.D. from Boston University, a M.Div. from the Candler School of Theology at Emory University, and a M.Div. from Methodist Theological Seminary in Seoul, Korea.
Chapter 1 Acknowledgments Chapter 2 General Introduction: The Question of Human Nature; Organization of the Study Chapter 3 Robert C. Neville's Notion of Human Nature: Human Person as a Determined Being by God the Creator; Human Person as a Natural Part of Physical Nature: Embodiment; Human Person as a Covenanted Being with Oneself, Others, Nature, and God; Conclusion Chapter 4 Tu Wei-ming's Notion of Human Nature: Introduction; Human Person as a Co-Creator; Human Person as a Sage Through Self-Cultivation; Human Person as a Part of Physical Nature; Human Person as an Organismic Unity; Conclusion Chapter 5 A Korean Confucian-Christian Notion of Human Nature: A Theology of Filial Piety: Introduction; The Shortcomings of Korean Christianity's Understanding of Salvation; Filial Piety and Human Responsibility for One's Salvation as Antidotes to Korean Chr Chapter 6 Concluding Thoughts Chapter 7 Notes Chapter 8 Bibliography Chapter 9 Index