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  1. Stanley Hauerwas discusses his theological and personal perspectives on love, suffering, forgiveness, grief, the theological method, and following Christ. Transcript: Stanley, thanks so much for joining me today. It’s good to be here.

  2. Stanley Hauerwas is a prominent American theologian, ethicist, and public intellectual, known for his contributions to political theology. His work, advocating for the church's active role in politics and rejecting the separation of church and state, has significantly influenced contemporary political theology.

  3. 21 de dez. de 2018 · In the final decades of the twentieth century, Stanley Hauerwas articulated the most coherent and influential political theology in the North American context. The initial focus of Hauerwas's work seems rather removed from bricks, brick-throwing, and a concern about Christian power in the world.

  4. Dr. Hauerwas was my ethics teacher at Duke Divinity. On the very first day of class, he began by addressing the crowded room with his signature Texan accent and said, “Let us pray.”. We, the students, dutifully bowed our heads in reverence and waited for the prayer to begin. This was the entirety of the prayer: “Frightening Lord, teaching ...

  5. Stanley Hauer was: An Interview. One often hears the complaint that Stanley Μ. Hauerwas — Gilbert T. Rowe Professor ofTheological Ethics at the Duke University Divinity School, Gifford Lecturer for the year 2001, author of over twenty books and the re. cently published Hauerwas Reader, and Time magazine's current choice as.

  6. The Problem of Modern Theology. The easiest way to understand Hauerwas’s critique of modernity is to trace historically how Christian theology has changed as a result of modernity’s influence. “At one time,” says Hauerwas, “Christian ethics did not exist” (Hauerwas, 2001b, 37). Or to be more precise, before the Enlightenment ...

  7. 8 de abr. de 2019 · Stanley Hauerwas is a theologian, ethicist, one of the most influential public intellectuals in the 20th century, and perhaps most importantly, Texan. He began teaching at the Notre Dame in 1970 and moved to Duke Divinity School in 1983 where he’s the Gilbert T. Rowe professor of divinity and law.