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Cultural Theology of Salvation (First edition)

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There aren't many serious works of systematic theology which engage with Breaking Bad, The Big Bang Theory, Crazy Heart, theories of capital and positive psychology, as well as the Isenheim Altarpiece and Handel's Messiah.

This lively, contemporary study of salvation does precisely that.

Christian doctrine cannot simply repeat what has gone before, even as it recognises the value and richness of the traditions Christianity carries with it.

CliveMarsh acknowledges this in exploring how doctrine interweaves with life experience and cultural consumption. A Cultural Theology of Salvation considers how salvation is to be understood and articulated now, when the theme of 'redemption' appears outside of Christianity in the arts and popular culture.

Marsh also assesses whether contemporary interest in 'happiness' has anything to do with salvation.

The first part of the book sets the enquiry in the context of how theology operates as a discipline, and the cultural climate in which theology has to be done.

The second part offers a number ofcase-studies (in art, music, TV, film, positive psychology, and economic life) exploring how the concerns of a doctrine of salvation are addressed directly and indirectly in Western culture.

The third part distils the results of the case-studies in formulating a contemporary exposition of salvation, andconcludes by showing what this means in practice.

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£107.80
Product Details
Oxford University Press
0192539043 / 9780192539045
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
234
18/10/2018
English
240 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%