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Culture, community and commitments: Stanley J. Grenz on theological method

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 August 2004

Archie J. Spencer
Affiliation:
Associated Canadian Theological Schools, Trinity Western University, 7600 Glover Road, Langley, British Columbia, V2Y 1Y1, [email protected]

Abstract

This article is a critical but appreciative response to the emerging theology and proposed theological method of Stanley J. Grenz. It is appreciative of the way that Grenz is helping evangelicals face the fact that they should be more engaging of the broader theological discussions regarding method if it is to avoid becoming hopelessly irrelevant, both within and beyond evangelicalism. At the same time it is critical of the apparent ambiguity in Grenz's proposals for a revised theological method and its resulting theology. The article reflects on the prior work of Grenz but employs his most recent book, Beyond Foundationalism, co-authored with John R. Frank and published by Fortress Press in 2001. In the final analysis the author takes a cautious approach to Grenz's proposals due to the fact that there seems to be an ambiguous understanding of postmodern culture, an uncritical acceptance of a social trinitarian basis for community and a somewhat conflicted understanding of foundations for theology, understood as ‘(post)foundationalism’.

Type
Article Review
Copyright
© Scottish Journal of Theology Ltd 2004

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