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From the Margins: A Celebration of the Theological Work of Donald W. Dayton (Princeton Theological Monograph Series) PDF

422 Pages·2007·5.532 MB·English
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Preview From the Margins: A Celebration of the Theological Work of Donald W. Dayton (Princeton Theological Monograph Series)

Table of Contents Title Page Acknowledgements Introduction 1: Women’s Studies A Neglected Tradition of Biblical Feminism • Response by Nancy A. Hardesty • Response by S. Sue Horner 2: The Social Role of the Church Piety and Radicalism: Ante-Bellum Social Evangelicalism in the U.S. • Response by Douglas M. Strong • Response by Jim Wallis 3: The Theology of Wesley Law and Gospel in the Wesleyan Tradition • Response by Howard Snyder • Response by William J. Abraham 4: Methodist Studies “Good News to the Poor” 5: The Holiness Movement Pneumatological Issues in the Holiness Movement • Response by Melvin Easterday Dieter • Response by David Bundy 6: Pentecostal Studies Revisiting the “Baptism with the Holy Spirit” Controversy • Response by Bill Faupel • Response by Amos Yong 7: The Pietist Impulse The Pietist Theological Critique of Biblical Inerrancy • Response by Frank D. Macchia • Response by Scott Kisker 8: American Popular Religious Culture James Dean, Popular Culture and Popular Religion • Response by Woodrow W. Whidden II • Response by William Kostlevy 9: Re-Thinking Evangelicalism “The Search for the Historical Evangelicalism” • Response by Robert K. Johnston • Response by Clark H. Pinnock 10: Toward a More Inclusive Ecumenism Yet Another Layer of the Onion • Response by Bother Jeff Gros, FSC • Response by Cecil M. Robeck Jr. 11: Interpreting Karl Barth Karl Barth and the Wider Ecumenism • Response by Christian T. Collins Winn • Response by James S. Nelson 12: Re-Interpreting Christianity in Korea The Four–Fold Gospel • Response by Myung Soo Park • Response by Dawk-Mahn Bae 13: Donald Dayton as Teacher 1998 Drew University Graduate School 14: An Autobiographical Response Select Bibliography Contributors From the Margins A Celebration of the Theological Work of Donald W. Dayton E����� �� C�������� T. C������ W��� FROM THE MARGINS A Celebration of the Theological Work of Donald W. Dayton Princeton Theological Monograph Series 75 Copyright © 2007 Wipf and Stock Publishers. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical articles or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Write: Permissions, Wipf and Stock Publishers, 199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3, Eugene, OR 97401. ISBN 13: 978-1-55635-135-8 Cataloging-in-Publication data: From the margins : a celebration of the theological work of Donald W. Dayton / edited by Christian T. Collins Winn Eugene, Ore.: Pickwick Publications, 2007 Princeton Theological Monograph Series 75 xxii + 434 p. ; 23 cm. Includes bibliography ISBN 13: 978-1-55635-135-8 EISBN 13: 978-1-63087-832-0 1. Dayton, Donald W. 2. Dayton, Donald W.—Bibliography. 3. Evangelicalism. 4. Pentecostalism. 5. Methodism—History. 6. United States—Church history. I. Collins Winn, Christian T. II. Title. III. Series. BR50 .F77 2007 Manufactured in the U.S.A. Princeton Theological Monograph Series K. C. Hanson and Charles M. Collier, Series Editors Recent volumes in the series: Ronald F. Satta The Sacred Text: Biblical Authority in Nineteenth-Century America Catherine L. Kelsey Schleiermacher’s Preaching, Dogmatics, and Biblical Criticism:The Interpretation of Jesus Christ in the Gospel of John Gabriel Andrew Msoka Basic Human Rights and the Humanitarian Crises in Sub- Saharan Africa: Ethical Reflections T. David Beck The Holy Spirit and the Renewal of All Things: Pneumatology in Paul and Jurgen Moltmann Trevor Dobbs Faith, Theology, and Psychoanalysis: The Life and Thought of Harry S. Guntrip Paul S. Chung, Kim Kyoung-Jae, and Veli-Matti Kärkkäinen, editors Asian Contextual Theology for the Third Millennium: A Theology of Minjung in Fourth-Eye Formation Bonnie L. Pattison Poverty in the Theology of John Calvin Anette Ejsing A Theology of Anticipation: A Constructive Study of C. S. Peirce Michael G. Cartwright Practices, Politics, and Performance: Toward a Communal Hermeneutic for Christian Ethics Stephen Finlan and Vladimir Kharlamov, editors Theōsis: Deification in Christian Theology David A. Ackerman Lo, I Tell You a Mystery: Cross, Resurrection, and Paraenesis in the Rhetoric of 1 Corinthians John A. Vissers The Neo-Orthodox Theology of W. W. Bryden Sam Hamstra, editor The Reformed Pastor by John Williamson Nevin Byron C. Bangert Consenting to God and Nature: Toward a Theocentric, Naturalistic, Theological Ethics Richard Valantasis et al., editors The Subjective Eye: Essays in Honor of Margaret Miles Caryn Riswold Coram Deo: Human Life in the Vision of God Philip L. Mayo “Those Who Call Themselves Jews”: The Church and Judaism in the Apocalypse of John Paul O. Ingram, editor Constructing a Relational Cosmology Edward J. Newell “Education Has Nothing to Do with Theology”:James Michael Lee’s Social Science Religious Instruction Mark A. Ellis, editor and translator The Arminian Confession of 1621 Photograph taken by Loma Linda University; used by permission. For Don The gospel of Christ knows of no religion, but social;no holiness but social holiness. “Faith working by love” is the length and breadth and depth and height of Christian perfection. —John Wesley, “Preface” to Hymns and Sacred Poems (1739) Acknowledgements L ��� all works of scholarship, this one would not have been possible without the contributions of many hands. I would like to thank my editors at Wipf and Stock Publishers, K. C. Hanson and Charlie Collier, who walked me through the editorial process for the first time. Without their willingness to buy into the vision of the volume it is likely that it may never have seen the light of day. During different points of the editorial process I have been assisted by a number of able teaching and research assistants, among whom are Breann Meierdirk, Gina Schulz, Tyler Gerdin, and Aaron Emery. I should also like to thank Young-Hoon Yoon whose bibliographic work on Dr. Dayton’s corpus formed the basis for the select bibliography at the end of this volume. My colleague Juan Hernández Jr. also provided editorial comments that proved very helpful. Thanks are also due to the contributors to the volume who worked with tight deadlines and somewhat amorphous parameters. Their patience, good humor and timeliness, as well as their enthusiasm for the project, gave hearty inspiration and encouragement as I labored over the volume. Finally, thanks are due to Don Dayton. When I first joined Dr. Dayton at Drew University in 1999, I proposed to him the idea of editing a Festschrift in his honor. Over the course of the next few years, as I grew to understand and appreciate his work in more detail, the project morphed into the current form now before the reader. During this time, Dr. Dayton proved to be a teacher, mentor, and friend of the highest caliber. I hope that he will accept this humble volume as a small token of my thanks for all he has done and meant to me. • Chapters of this book appeared in an earlier form in various journals and books. The author and publisher gratefully acknowledge permission to reprint from these publications: 2. “Piety and Radicalism: Ante-Bellum Social Evangelicalism in the U.S.” was first published in Radical Religion 3, no. 1 (1976) 36–40. 3. “Law and Gospel in the Wesleyan Tradition” was first published in Grace Theological Journal 12, no. 2 (1991) 233–43.

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