Bearing Sin as Church Community
Bonhoeffer's Hamartiology
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:22nd Feb '24
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Examines Bonhoeffer's hamartiology in the light of the doctrines of Augustine and Luther.
Hyun Joo Kim claims that Bonhoeffer transforms and reconstructs the Augustinian doctrine of original sin by shifting the hamartiological premise from the doctrine of God to the doctrine of the church based on his Lutheran resources. In Bonhoeffer’s view, Augustine’s doctrine of original sin does not fully relate the doctrine of sin to the responsibility of the saints. In order to reform Augustinian hamartiology, Bonhoeffer appropriates Augustine’s notion of the church as the whole Christ (totus Christus), which is located in Augustine’s ecclesiology. Kim explicates how Augustine relates his epistemological premises in his Christianized Platonism to his formulation of the doctrine of original sin, and examines how Luther’s Christocentric standpoint transforms Augustine’s anthropology and ultimately leads Luther to his relational hamartiology. Kim contends that Bonhoeffer’s later hamartiology and ethics contain the most distinctive characteristics of Bonhoeffer’s doctrine of sin, in that he not only incorporates both the active and passive dimensions of sin, but also intensifies his continuing notion of “vicarious representative action” towards the church community.
Bonhoeffer appears as a highly creative inheritor of the western doctrine of sin in Kim’s marvellously clear narration of the historical development of this central Christian doctrine. In doing so she makes intelligible one of the most difficult and misused and yet central ideas in Bonhoeffer’s writings, vicarious representative action. -- Brian Brock, University of Aberdeen, UK
Rigorous, learned and creative, Hyun Joo Kim’s work represents not only an important new reading of Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s thought, but also a fresh and thought-provoking perspective on the doctrine of sin. Tracing Bonhoeffer’s critical development of Augustinian and Lutheran thought, Kim discovers an account of sin that takes seriously human existence in and for community. She ably demonstrates Bonhoeffer’s continuing relevance for Christian communities as they navigate the complexities of responsibility in relation to sin and evil. -- Rachel Muers, University of Leeds, UK
ISBN: 9780567706621
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
232 pages