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Church, gospel and empire: how the politics of sovereignty impregnated the west

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Church, gospel and empire: how the politics of sovereignty impregnated the west. / Mitchell, Roger Haydon.
Eugene, Oregon, USA: Wipf & Stock, 2011. 258 p.

Research output: Book/Report/ProceedingsBook

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@book{4d4f8477ec0245a994c6e5740a3daac3,
title = "Church, gospel and empire: how the politics of sovereignty impregnated the west",
abstract = "This book addresses the apparent dislocation of the church and theology from the sociocultural mainstream and attempts to recover its counterpolitical voice. It argues that early in ecclesiastical history, the tradition{\textquoteright}s founding and constituent principles were betrayed by a complicity with the prevailing politics of sovereignty that has continued to this day. Following the contours of contemporary theologians who explain the dislocation in terms of a fall inearly modernity, an initial subsumption of transcendence by sovereignty is proposed. The genealogy of this fall is then explored in four historical studies focusing on the theopolitical transformations of law, violence, and appeasement from their beginnings in the writings of Eusebius of Caesarea to their culmination in the commodification of life itself. The trajectory is traced through seminal soteriological developments such as the crusade theology of Pope Innocent III, the inversion of the corpus verum and the corpus mysticum, and the conjunction of sovereignty and capital in the mysterious currency of the Bank of England. The narrative culminates in the seemingly paradoxical concurrence of the politics of biopower and theso-called century of the Holy Spirit. Drawing on a radical substratum intimated in the case studies, the final section develops an innovative christological configuration of kenosis or what is termed “kenarchy.” This provides a re-imagining of the divine distinct from its implication with imperial sovereignty, which could allow theology to make a more effective contemporarypolitical intervention.",
keywords = "political theology",
author = "Mitchell, {Roger Haydon}",
year = "2011",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781610977449",
publisher = "Wipf & Stock",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Church, gospel and empire

T2 - how the politics of sovereignty impregnated the west

AU - Mitchell, Roger Haydon

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - This book addresses the apparent dislocation of the church and theology from the sociocultural mainstream and attempts to recover its counterpolitical voice. It argues that early in ecclesiastical history, the tradition’s founding and constituent principles were betrayed by a complicity with the prevailing politics of sovereignty that has continued to this day. Following the contours of contemporary theologians who explain the dislocation in terms of a fall inearly modernity, an initial subsumption of transcendence by sovereignty is proposed. The genealogy of this fall is then explored in four historical studies focusing on the theopolitical transformations of law, violence, and appeasement from their beginnings in the writings of Eusebius of Caesarea to their culmination in the commodification of life itself. The trajectory is traced through seminal soteriological developments such as the crusade theology of Pope Innocent III, the inversion of the corpus verum and the corpus mysticum, and the conjunction of sovereignty and capital in the mysterious currency of the Bank of England. The narrative culminates in the seemingly paradoxical concurrence of the politics of biopower and theso-called century of the Holy Spirit. Drawing on a radical substratum intimated in the case studies, the final section develops an innovative christological configuration of kenosis or what is termed “kenarchy.” This provides a re-imagining of the divine distinct from its implication with imperial sovereignty, which could allow theology to make a more effective contemporarypolitical intervention.

AB - This book addresses the apparent dislocation of the church and theology from the sociocultural mainstream and attempts to recover its counterpolitical voice. It argues that early in ecclesiastical history, the tradition’s founding and constituent principles were betrayed by a complicity with the prevailing politics of sovereignty that has continued to this day. Following the contours of contemporary theologians who explain the dislocation in terms of a fall inearly modernity, an initial subsumption of transcendence by sovereignty is proposed. The genealogy of this fall is then explored in four historical studies focusing on the theopolitical transformations of law, violence, and appeasement from their beginnings in the writings of Eusebius of Caesarea to their culmination in the commodification of life itself. The trajectory is traced through seminal soteriological developments such as the crusade theology of Pope Innocent III, the inversion of the corpus verum and the corpus mysticum, and the conjunction of sovereignty and capital in the mysterious currency of the Bank of England. The narrative culminates in the seemingly paradoxical concurrence of the politics of biopower and theso-called century of the Holy Spirit. Drawing on a radical substratum intimated in the case studies, the final section develops an innovative christological configuration of kenosis or what is termed “kenarchy.” This provides a re-imagining of the divine distinct from its implication with imperial sovereignty, which could allow theology to make a more effective contemporarypolitical intervention.

KW - political theology

M3 - Book

SN - 9781610977449

BT - Church, gospel and empire

PB - Wipf & Stock

CY - Eugene, Oregon, USA

ER -