Ebook
In Quest of a Vital Protestant Center probes the relationship between Scripture and culture in twentieth-century US theology and biblical studies. It points to the necessity of turning to what Karl Barth has referred to as "the strange new world within the Bible" for any revitalization of mainline Protestantism in the tradition of the Protestant Reformers in critical dialogue with serious evangelical theology. The study includes a historical overview underlying what Demetrion refers to as the "fundamentalist/modernist great divide," which continues to resonate powerfully in contemporary US Protestant thought and culture. Demetrion offers an in-depth exploration of four representative twentieth-century Protestant theologians and biblical scholars, spanning from the conservative evangelical theology of J. I. Packer to the postliberal dialectical theology of Walter Brueggemann. The book includes a chapter on the neo-orthodox legacy as a mediating resource in bringing evangelical and postliberal theology into dialogue with the core issues of theology, biblical hermeneutics, and religious culture. Demetrion concludes with a critically empathetic review of the postliberal dialectical theology of Douglas J. Hall and the evangelical narrative theology of Richard Lints. In linking evangelical, postliberal, and neo-orthodox theology to a common search for a vital Protestant center, this book will facilitate fruitful dialogue among divergent schools of Protestant thought and culture.
"A big 'thank you' to George Demetrion for helping readers see
that the center does hold. A wise and winsome work."
--Gabriel Fackre, Samuel Abbot Professor of Christian Theology
Emeritus, Andover Newton Theological School, Newton, MA
"George Demetrion is gathering up the theological foundation stones
on which a new kind of church can be constructed, one that is truly
ecumenical, truly evangelical, and 'generously orthodox.'"
--Richard L. Floyd, pastor emeritus, First Church of Christ,
Pittsfield, MA
"For centuries, biblical texts have given reformers the power to
rupture the unity of the church. The author believes that biblical
texts can be the bridge to unity for moderate, liberal, and
conservative churches to form a new theological coalition. This is
an exciting venture in finding common ground between J. I. Packer
and Walter Brueggemann. The passion of the writer is rooted in his
lifelong study of Scripture and his life together with Assembly of
God, United Church of Christ, and Methodist congregations."
--Herb Davis, pastor emeritus, Eliot Church, United Church of
Christ (UCC), Newton, MA
"Superficial categories in music have not allowed Bob Dylan to join
one of his heroes, Hank Williams Sr., in the Country Music Hall of
Fame. George Demetrion has broken down similar walls in theology by
bringing together a wide diversity of theologians in this book.
Bravo."
--F. Christopher Anderson, editor of The New Mercersburg
Review
George Demetrion is a self-educated Christian scholar who has audited courses at Hartford and Bethel Seminaries. He is a writing tutor at Capital Community College and an Adult Basic Instructor at the 1199 Training Fund in Hartford, Connecticut. He formerly worked as an adult education program coordinator at the Saint Vincent de Paul Village in San Diego, California, and teaches courses in the Online Adult Literacy Certification Program at the Virginia Commonwealth University. In addition to his two books published by Wipf and Stock--In Quest of a Vital Protestant Center: An Ecumenical Evangelical Perspective (2014) and The Historical Jesus and the Christ of Faith: Marcus Borg and N. T. Wright in Critical Dialogue (2017)--he is also the author of Conflicting Paradigms in Adult Literacy Education: In Quest of a US Democratic Politics of Literacy (2005).