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About The Book
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Description: In a globalized world and an age that cannot name itself how do Christian communities sustain a recognizable gospel identity? How might examining tradition and identity formation from both theology and cultural anthropology help churches approach the challenges of being a follower of Jesus today? With these questions in focus Colleen Mallon studies symbol systems in the works of anthropologists Mary Douglas Victor Turner and Clifford Geertz and places her findings in dialogue with a thick description of discipleship gleaned from the great Roman Catholic ecclesiologist Yves Congar OP. The result is a reflection on gospel identity that will be invaluable to Christian ministers missioners and students of theology interested in the social and theological processes of disciple formation. Endorsements: This path-breaking book opens new directions in the conversation between faith and culture as well as the contemporary dialogue between theology and social science. Discipleship and the dynamic nature of religious tradition are explored through an insightful correlation of Geertz Douglas and Asad with Congar whose work was so central to the Second Vatican Council. Freshness originality and theological depth make this critical for ecclesiology and missiology as well as practical theology. Highly recommended. --Bryan Froehle St. Thomas University Miami This is a truly amazing book. Using the method of mutually critical correlation between modern and postmodern anthropologists on the one hand and Catholic Theology on the other Colleen Mallon takes ecclesiology and missiology in a new and exciting direction. Her work is clear expansive and passionately faith-filled. --Stephen Bevans SVD Catholic Theological Union Chicago Beautifully written this volume retrieves the rich notion of tradition as exemplified in the work of Yves Congar and correlates it with the contributions of cultural anthropology to address the current crisis in Roman Catholic identity formation and transformation in a globalized and postmodern context. Professor Mallon offers a model of the critical appropriation of the social sciences in theology. It provides a rich resource for all Christian communities struggling with traditioning disciples. --T. Howland Sanks SJ Jesuit School of Theology/Graduate Theological Union Berkeley About the Contributor(s): Colleen M. Mallon is Assistant Professor of Systematic Theology at the Aquinas Institute of Theology in St. Louis Missouri. She is the author of the award-winning article Globalization at Large published in Terrence W. Tilleys New Horizons in Theology (2005).