Ebook
Scott Bader-Saye Frederick Christian Bauerschmidt Michael Baxter Daniel M. Bell Jr. Jana Marguerite Bennett Michael G. Cartwright William T. Cavanaugh Peter Dula Chris K. Huebner Kelly S. Johnson D. Stephen Long M. Therese Lysaught David Matzko McCarthy Joel James Shuman J. Alexander Sider Jonathan Tran Paul J. Wadell Theodore Walker Jr.
"Good arguments sustain good friendships, and this volume bears
witness to the extraordinary friendships that Hauerwas and his
students have been drawn into. Yes, there's gratitude and devotion
here, but it's the criticisms that stand out, that make this a
particularly feisty festschrift.
His dependence on Yoder runs afoul of his devotion to Aristotle. He
domesticates Wittgenstein's skepticism in order to discount his own
individualism. He misconstrues the church as polis, makes a mess of
practical reason, and gives metaphysics short shrift. He bungles
the relationship between disability and grace, misunderstands how
liturgy affects the moral life, and runs rough shod over the just
war tradition. He is not yet a pacifist! He is an heir of the
liberalism he despises! And he's a lousy dresser to boot!
Those concerned that Hauerwas's talk of tradition, community, and
virtue encourages slavish emulation of authorities and exemplars
will find little evidence of that here. Rather, what we find is
appreciation mixed with complaint, confidence leavened with doubt,
and loyalty expressed in conversation. That we might all have such
students, such friends!"
--John Bowlin
Princeton Theological Seminary
"Stanley Hauerwas is a public provocateur, a ravenous reader, a
restless wrestler with the truth, and an eccentric devotee of
baseball, murder mysteries, and liturgically-shaped discipleship.
But most of all is he is a devoted, demanding, and dogged academic
father to dozens of doctoral students. The breadth of his character
takes a community to display. Here, more than ever before, that
community of character does in public what Hauerwas and his
students do best: tussle, and refine, and introduce new
interlocutors, and dismiss out of hand, and rephrase more
charitably, and rediscover ancient wisdom, and go back to Aquinas,
and quote Barth, and dismantle platitudes, and unsentimentally face
the gift and demands of Christ for church, academy, and politics
today. This is a work of love turned into a call to renewal, a
family reunion transformed into a symposium, a tribute in the guise
of a challenge. Admirers and critics of Hauerwas will be enriched
by these compelling essays, an ordered array of disagreements in
love."
--Sam Wells
Dean of the Chapel, Duke University
Charles Pinches is Chair of the Department of Theology and Religious Studies at the University of Scranton.