Christopher Ben Simpson tells the story of modern Christian theology against the backdrop of the history of modernity itself. The book tells  the many ways that theology became modern while seeing how modernity  arose in no small part from theology. These intertwined stories progress  through four parts.
In Part I, Emerging Modernity, Simpson  goes from the beginnings of modernity in the late Middle Ages through  the Protestant Reformation and Renaissance Humanism to the creative  tension between Enlightenments and Awakenings of the eighteenth-century. Part II, The Long Nineteenth-Century,  presents the great  movements and figures arising out of these creative tension - from  Romanticism and Schleiermacher to Ritschlianism and Vatican I. Part III, Twentieth-Century Crisis and Modernity,  proceeds through the revolutionary theologies of period of the World  Wars such as that of Karl Barth or novuelle theologie; this part  includes a thorough section on modern Eastern Orthodox theology.  Finally, Part IV, The Late Modern Supernova, lays out the diverse  panoply of recent theologies - from the various liberation theologies  to the revisionist, the secular, the postliberal, and the postsecular.
Designed for classroom use, this volume includes the following features:
-     boxes/chart/diagrams/visual organizations of the information  presented included throughout: e.g. lists of key points, visual  organizations of systematic ideas in a given thinker, lists of  significant works, lists of significant dates, brief outlines of the  basic structure of some major theological works
-    both a one-page chapter title table of the contents and an expanded(multipage) table of contents
-    chapter at-a-glance overview/outline at the beginning of each chapter
- specific references to secondary works and key primary works in Enqlish translation at the end of chapters
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