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About The Book
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What does failure mean for theology? In the Bible we find some unsettling answers to this question. We find lastness usurping firstness and foolishness undoing wisdom. We discover too a weakness more potent than strength and a loss of life that is essential to finding life. Jesus himself offers an array of paradoxes and puzzles through his life and teachings. He even submits himself to humiliation and death to show the cosmos the true meaning of victory. As David Bentley Hart observes most of us would find Christians truly cast in the New Testament mold fairly obnoxious: civically reprobate ideologically unsound economically destructive politically irresponsible socially discreditable and really just a bit indecent. By incorporating the work of scholars working with a range of frameworks within the Christian tradition Theologies of Failure aims to offer a unique and important contribution to understanding and embracing failure as a pivotal theological category. As the various contributors highlight it is a category with a powerful capacity for illuminating our theological concerns and perspectives. It is a category that frees us to see old ideas in a brand-new light and helps to foster an awareness of ideas that certain modes of analysis may have obscured from our vision. In short this book invites readers to consider how both theology and failure can help us ask new questions discover new possibilities and refuse the ways of the world. In this moment when theology is in danger of failing along with its traditional institutions when politics threatens to fail us all along with the earth itself--these essays burst failure open from within. Vibrating with the art the humility and even the humor of our indelible inadequacies this conversation enlivens a practice more important than success--an improvisational minding of failure that may indeed prove to be a condition of the possibility of theology itself. --Catherine Keller Professor of Constructive Theology Drew University The scandal of the cross . . .; . . . whenever I am weak then I am strong . . . . . . Rather than being marginal theological slogans Theologies of Failure reminds us that these and other similar motifs and themes are the deepest truths at the heart of the Christian story of redemption and that they point to what is possible only on the other side of the misfortune defeat and loss that permeate every domain of creaturely and historical existence. --Amos Yong Professor of Theology & Mission Fuller Seminary Given the almost-irresistible temptation to which the Church regularly succumbs--to imitate the worlds obsession with glory and national greatness success stories triumphalism celebration of the powerful and winners and denigration of losers--this book is a timely and perhaps timeless resource for resistance and renewal . . . Its not clear what it means to construct a successful book concerned with Christianity and failure but Sirvent and Reyburn have done it. --Michael L. Budde Center for World Catholicism and Intercultural Theology DePaul University Roberto Sirvent is Professor of Political and Social Ethics at Hope International University in Fullerton California. Duncan B. Reyburn is Senior Lecturer at the Department of Visual Arts at the University of Pretoria South Africa.