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JBTM Book Reviews<br />

186<br />

The Work of Theology. By Stanley Hauerwas. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2015. 305 pages.<br />

Paperback, $28.00.<br />

Stanley Hauerwas is Gilbert T. Rowe Professor Emeritus of Divinity and Law at Duke<br />

University in Durham, North Carolina. He has written broadly in the disciplines of theology<br />

and ethics. He holds degrees from Southwestern University (BA), Yale University (BD, MA,<br />

MPhil, PhD), and the University of Edinburgh (DD). Among his other works are Approaching<br />

the End, Living Gently in a Violent World, Hannah’s Child: A Theologian’s Memoir, and Resident<br />

Aliens: Life in the Christian Colony, which he co-authored with William H. Willimon.<br />

In The Work of Theology, Hauerwas aims to explain the “how to” of theology. More<br />

specifically, he sets out to do this by reflecting on how he came to think theologically. The<br />

book is divided into thirteen chapters, plus an introduction and a postscript. Though the<br />

book is divided into chapters, each chapter is more of an essay than a chapter. These essays<br />

do not necessarily lead logically to the next essay in the book’s order; rather, they seem to<br />

stand on their own as individual works. This does not mean that there is no logical coherence<br />

to the book, but that the book is more of a collection of essays on topics that have a place in<br />

theological prolegomena and are not structured in any particular order. Though The Work of<br />

Theology is a work in the “how to” of theology, it does not provide an established theological<br />

method. Again, it is primarily a collection of essays that deal with topics that come under<br />

the umbrella of theological prolegomena. The essays in The Work of Theology cover a number<br />

of topics. These topics include, but are not limited to, how the Holy Spirit works, how to<br />

tell time theologically, the relationship of theology to ministry, how to write a theological<br />

sentence, how to be theologically funny, and how to do (or not to do) Protestant ethics.<br />

There are multiple strengths in Hauerwas’s text. For one, the reader will notice the book’s<br />

accessibility. Though several of the topics that Hauerwas deals with are dense and difficult, he<br />

does more than an adequate job of writing in such a way that an interested layperson should<br />

be able to comprehend the book without excessive reference. For example, in his essay “How<br />

to Tell Time Theologically,” Hauerwas discusses a theological understanding of the concept<br />

of time. After discussing the contributions of several prominent theologians on the topic—<br />

namely, Augustine—Hauerwas returns to a narrative understanding of time (100). In order<br />

to avoid losing his readers in the different theories of time and God’s relationship to time,<br />

Hauerwas reminds readers that humans exist in time (i.e., God’s time), and that this should<br />

be the primary focus of how Christians tell time.<br />

Another important contribution Hauerwas provides is his understanding of the role of<br />

language in theology. He discusses this both in the introduction and in the essay, “How to<br />

Write a Theological Sentence.” Hauerwas draws primarily from the work of Stanley Fish, who<br />

might give the conservative reader some pause, since Fish is one of the major contributors<br />

to contemporary reader-response hermeneutics. Many Evangelicals have naturally held<br />

a disposition against reader-response hermeneutics due to their neglect of the role of the

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