In the last half of the 20th century, a consensus emerged that Christian theology in the Western tradition had failed to produce a viable doctrine of the Holy Spirit, and that Augustine's trinitarian theology bore the blame for much of that failure. This book offers a fresh rereading of Western trinitarian theology to better understand the logic of its pneumatology. Ables studies the pneumatologies of Augustine and Karl Barth, and argues that the vision of the doctrine of the Spirit in these theologians should be understood as a way of talking about participating in the mystery of God as a performance of the life of Christ. He claims that for both theologians trinitarian doctrine encapsulates the grammar of the divine self-giving in history. The function of pneumatology in particular is to articulate the human reception and enactment of God's self-giving as itself part of the act of God; this self-involving logic is the special grammar of the doctrine of the Holy Spirit.
1. The Problem of the Spirit in Contemporary Trinitarian Theology\2. A Pneumatology of the Knowledge of God: The Aporetic of Perfomance and Ascent in The Trinity\3. The Apophaticism of Ethical Performance: The Totus Christus, Relation and Deification in Augustine\4. The Knowledge of God as Election: Barth's Dialectical Pneumatology of Participation\5. The Hypostatic Union and the Vicissitudes of Augustinian Trinitarianism in CD4\6. The Problem of Trinitarian Ontology and the Ethics of Gratuity After Hegel.
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Incarnational Realism, Travis E. Ables offers an analysis of Augustine and Barths respective pneumatologies in order to counter this standard narrative of a supposed trinitarian decline in Western and Augustinian theology &Much is to be commended in Ables work. He is a clear writer with a gift for lucid explanations of complex ideas and schools of thought. As such, the book is as helpful for demystifying contemporary trajectories in trinitarian theology as it is for analҬ