The concern of Public Theology is that theology remain in and be for the public rather than be isolationist and distinctively ecclesial. It is concerned that theology focus on the public character of truth, not the esoteric nature of Biblical revelation. It requires of theologians that they be more ‘statesmen-philosophers’ than Christian teachers.[1] The opposite of Public Theology would be H. Richard Niebuhr’s first of five possible relationships of ‘Christ’ (i.e., the Church) and culture: Christ Against Culture.[2]
The relevance of this essay
lies in the appeal of Public Theology in both the West and the Majority World. In the West, Liberal Theology sought to universalise
Christianity such that its message was not unique and esoteric. The fundamentals of Liberal Theology were the
fatherhood of God, the brotherhood of mankind, and the infinite worth of the
human soul. Note the omission in this of
any reference to Christ, any uniquely Christian convictions, and any reference
to the Church. Christianity is absorbed
into the public discourse. Add to this
the thrust in Liberation Theology that theology should be reflection following,
not preceding, social activism in the name of justice, and one has a theology
considered relevant for the public while the Church disappears like the moon
with the midday sun. Outside the West, concern
for relevance for the context proceeded along two trajectories. On the one hand, the real, practical needs of
society had little time for speculative, systematic theology. Theology needed to be ‘public’ in the sense
of responding to human suffering. On the
other hand, postcolonial societies seeking to find dignity in their own
cultures sometimes sought contextual theologies that treated historical
theology as a European (and American) product.
Consequently, both for the West and for the Majority World, a Public
Theology has seemed more fitting than Biblical, Systematic, and historical
theology.
This essay, however, points out several significant problems with Public Theology and argues, on the contrary, that the way for the Church to engage the public realm is for it to develop and maintain its own identity and to do so publicly. It is to be the Church on the square, not lose its identity in the causes of the public square. Jesus' images of the Church as salt, a city on a hill, and a light (Matthew 5.13-16) are presented within the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5-7), a sermon outlining an ethic for the unique community of the Kingdom of God that follows Jesus in discipleship. Precisely in adopting this distinctive identity is the Church able to make a public witness.
Public Theology can
be described in terms of the audience, context, agenda, relevance, and method
employed. As such, it is a type of
theology. It is not simply a practical
and relevant outworking of Christian
theology for a wider (public) audience, in a political or social context,
addressing a common agenda relevant to a society’s pressing needs, and
employing objective, social-scientific methods of research. That is, it does not begin with Christian
theological and ethical convictions. It
is not a theology that proceeds by means of Biblical interpretation. It is not confessional and
communitarian. It is not theology
applied to ministry and missions. In
other words, Public Theology actually transforms Christian theology into
something else.
Regarding the
audience, Public Theology does not confine itself to the Church. David Tracy, for example, suggests that there
are three ‘publics’: society at large, the Academy, and the Church.[3] These three publics produce three theologies,
but, he argues, they can be correlated. The
correlation of the three theologies aims to produce a theology that is deemed
to be accessible to the wider, pluralistic audience. A systematic theology produced for the Church
draws on uniquely Christian resources, such as the Bible. However, a further question needing to be
answered is how the Bible is to be used.
Tracy keeps the use of Christian or other religious resources as public
as possible. Thus, different religious
convictions and practices develop around so-called ‘classics’, with Jesus as a
primary ‘classic’ for Christianity.
Reflection on various such classics in different religions allows
inter-faith dialogue.
Public theology
has little interest in the Church’s history and traditions. Its value of being relevant tends to
translate into a focus on contemporary times and current context. Like Liberation theologies, it is suspicious
of theoretical reflection and emphasises urgent action. The Biblical text, moreover, is demoted in
relevance to being a tool for reflection and rhetoric, not an authoritative
canon directing a community. It is not
revelatory but merely initiates dialogue.
This is quite contrary to how the Bible has been understood throughout
the centuries. Moreover, the Church
exists as a contemporary community facing present-day challenges and coming up
with its own solutions. What came in the
past, either in Scripture or the Church’s history and theology, provides a
variety of examples the present ‘community’ (rather than Church) might
consider. Yet the community directed by
a Public theology continuously orients itself to the issues and language of the
public square and intentionally avoids esoteric or partisan
considerations.
In response to
this approach to theology, George Lindbeck responds that ‘it is the text … which
absorbs the world, rather than the world the text.’[4] The text is its own authority, not a tool for
theological expression or a collection of examples from which to draw positive
and negative lessons. In advocating a
use of Biblical and Christian examples for public discourse, Bryan Massingale
says,
For Catholic theologians, one does public theology by appealing to
those Catholic persons, texts, and symbols that possess a classic character. I
suggest that among these would be people like Francis of Assisi, Mother Teresa,
Dorothy Day, and Thomas Merton (the latter two effectively invoked by Pope
Francis in his address to Congress in the fall of 2015); the gospel parables of
the Good Samaritan, the Last Judgment, and the Rich Man and Lazarus; and the
image of the Kingdom (Reign) of God. These are among the persons, texts, and
symbols whose transcultural resonance could ground normative discourse on
matters of public concern to those who do not share Catholic faith convictions.[5]
Public theology’s theological method
is also problematic. Scripture is a
canonical text, speaking a clear message to the contemporary context, not a
collection of (even at times conflicting) answers from which a contemporary
community might choose. The text is the
context into which the contemporary community locates itself.
Nor is Scripture merely generative revelation,
producing a new context from which a theology might be extracted by means of
generalisations and abstractions, only to be reapplied as the contemporary
community sees fit. The method of
theologising must not be abstracting from the Biblical context and
recontextualising in the current context but contextualising the current
context in the Biblical context. As
Lindbeck argues, theologising requires an intratextual approach rather than the
abstracting, extratextual approaches so often promoted:
The believer, so an intratextual approach would maintain, is not
told primarily to be conformed to a reconstructed Jesus of history (as Hans
Küng maintains), nor to a metaphysical Christ of faith (as in much of the propositionalist
tradition), nor to an abba experience of God (as for Schillebeeckx), nor to an
agapeic way of being in the world (as for David Tracy), but he or she is rather
to be conformed to the Jesus Christ depicted in the narrative. An intratextual reading tries to derive the
interpretive framework that designates the theologically controlling sense from
the literary structure of the text itself.[6]
By locking theology to the literary structure
of the Biblical text, theology cannot become an ideology, and the mode of
theological enquiry will be interpretation, not application. However, Lindbeck’s focus on the narrative
structure of the text still allows one to use Scripture in a way that sits
above the specific commandments of the Bible.
The Biblical characters and authors do not stop short of understanding
the Bible as God’s Word and ethics as a matter of obedience. There is much more to the Bible—and to the
Church’s historical theology—than faithful practice of a metanarrative or
application of more minor narratives.
Public theology’s failure to produce
an ecclesiology is the result of a theological method that promotes the public
square. Its methodology privileges the social
sciences rather than theology, and theology is understood in non-confessional
ways. Inter-religious dialogue,
political activity, human rights, multicultural enrichment, social justice call
for sociological analyses to which theology may or may not make its
contribution.
Thus, as to the
agenda of Public Theology, any ecclesial or confessional identity obstructs
attention to the public good, interfaith dialogue, and coexistence for
multicultural and multi-faith communities.
Public values, universal principles, and common virtues are sought as
the motivation for and clarification of ‘social justice’ or ‘the good’ for all
society. Faith communities bring their
people and contributions to the public projects rather than stand out
distinctly.
Lindbeck, on the
contrary, insists that doctrine is inseparable from its cultural and linguistic
understanding of life.[7] From a Biblical perspective, Israel’s unique
identity as the people of God in covenant relationship with Him, and the Church’s
particular identity ‘in Christ’ produce an understanding of relationship to the
public square that does not dissolve their distinct identity but enhances
it. The Church stands out as salt and
light in the world (Matthew 5.13-16).
The unique narrative of God’s people produces a unique people with a
unique set of convictions, practices, and devotion.
The concerns of
Public Theology are important to engage.
Yet we must ask, ‘How should Biblical, orthodox, Evangelical scholars
approach theology in regard to matters of audience, context, agenda, relevance,
and method?’ For us, not only the
content of theology but also our approach to doing theology arises from Scripture. We might add that we also value the rich
history of interpretation in the Church Fathers, the Reformers, and the Evangelical
movement. What emerges is a uniquely
Christian theology. The audience of
Scripture is the people of God. The
context of theology is Scripture itself, not only with its narrative but also
with its entire content as God speaks to us.
From Scripture comes the agenda for theology. Scripture is relevant not simply because it
is applicable to various contexts but especially because it is itself
truth. Thus, the method of theological
enquiry is not so much application but interpretation. The Church is itself a community of
interpretation, just as the synagogue was and is for Judaism.
How, then, does
the Church engage the public? It decidedly
must not engage the public by dissolving its identity in the public square,
like salt in water. This would be the
case of a Public Theology that correlates theologies for society, the Academy,
and the Church. Jesus’ image of His disciples
being the salt of the earth was intended to mean that they were to have a
sharpness of taste (Matthew 5.13).
Tasteless salt is good for nothing.
It should be thrown out and trampled underfoot. The Church’s public presence is not in its
shared identity with the public sector but in its distinct identity. It contributes to the public situation
precisely because it is not the public’s understanding and solution. Jesus continues to make this point with
another image: being a city on a hill that stands out to the entire region (v.
14). Or the Church is to be a light on a
stand that enlightens the entire household (v. 15). The Church is to be salt, a city on a hill,
and a light in the house with its observable good works (v. 16). The world is capable of recognising the
Church’s works as good, but it is the distinctive identity of the Church as God’s
own people that makes it possible to do good works. That identity is formed by the Church’s
devotion to God in worship, theology, and obedience.
[1] So the initial description of ‘Public Theology’ by Martin E. Marty,
“Reinhold Niebuhr: Public Theology and the American Experience,” Journal of Religion 54.4 (1974), pp.
332–59.
[2] H. Richard Niebuhr’s Christ and
Culture (New York: Harper, 1951).
The other paradigms listed by Niebuhr are: Christ above culture, Christ
transforming culture, Christ and culture in paradox, and Christ of culture. Public theology envisions ‘Christ’—the Church—so
in synch with culture in social justice that disappears into the public good.
[3] E.g., David Tracy, The Analogical Imagination: Christian
Theology and the Culture of Pluralism (New York: Crossroad, 1981); David
Tracy and John Cobb, Talking About God: Doing Theology in the Context of
Modern Pluralism (New York: Seabury, 1983).
[4] George Lindbeck, The Nature of Doctrine: Religion and Theology in a Postliberal Age
(London: SPCK, 1984), p. 118.
[5] Bryan N. Massingale, ‘Theology in the Public Sphere in the
Twenty-First Century,’ The Journal of the College Theology Society (8 Nov.,
2016); online: https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/horizons/article/theology-in-the-public-sphere-in-the-twentyfirst-century/395F1735C195F6EB368AD1AB42FC66C3 (accessed 14 October, 2024). He is following David Tracy, The Analogical Imagination (New
York: Crossroad, 1986), p. 108.
[6] George Lindbeck, ‘Christ and Postmodernity, The Nature of Doctrine:
Towards a Postliberal Theology,’ in Reading
in Modern Theology: Britain and America, ed. R. Gill (London: SPCK, 1995),
p. 192f.
[7] George Lindbeck, The Nature of Doctrine.
1 comment:
People always demand that the Kingdom be made relevant to the world (public). Never the other way round. What a word, “relevant!” That’s what I love about Jesus; He was so amazingly relevant! That’s why he was so successful! “They are from the world; therefore they speak from the world, and the world listens to them. We are from God. Whoever knows God listens to us; whoever is not from God does not listen to us. by this we know the Spirit of truth and the spirit of error” (1 John 4:6,7). Check the context to find our who is “they”.
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