wunderkammermag
wunderkammermag
  • Видео 9
  • Просмотров 57 965
Stanley Hauerwas On Hannah's Child
Dr. Hauerwas discusses his recently published book Hannah's Child: A Theologian's Memoir with Wunderkammer Magazine.
www.wunderkammermag.com
Interview conducted by Dan Morehead. Videographer: J.M. Harper. Producer: David Michael
Просмотров: 3 426

Видео

Stanley Hauerwas On Reinhold Niebuhr
Просмотров 10 тыс.14 лет назад
Dr. Hauerwas discusses American theologian Reinhold Niebuhr with Wunderkammer Magazine. www.wunderkammermag.com Interview conducted by Dan Morehead. Videographer: J.M. Harper. Producer: David Michael
Stanley Hauerwas On Jeff Stout
Просмотров 3,2 тыс.14 лет назад
Dr. Hauerwas discusses what he has learned from Princeton University Professor of Religion, Jeffrey Stout. www.wunderkammermag.com Interview conducted by Dan Morehead. Videographer: J.M. Harper. Producer: David Michael
Stanley Hauerwas On His Evangelical Audience
Просмотров 18 тыс.14 лет назад
Considering that Evangelicals have produced some of the realities that Dr. Hauerwas has spent a career resisting (pietism, 'personal relationships with Jesus,' church growth, etc.), he discusses his Evangelical audience with Wunderkammer Magazine. www.wunderkammermag.com Interview conducted by Dan Morehead. Videographer: J.M. Harper. Producer: David Michael
Stanley Hauerwas On Jürgen Moltmann
Просмотров 16 тыс.14 лет назад
Dr. Hauerwas discusses German theologian Jürgen Moltmann with Wunderkammer Magazine. www.wunderkammermag.com Interview conducted by Dan Morehead. Videographer: J.M. Harper. Producer: David Michael
Wunderkammer Artist Series: The Album Leaf
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.14 лет назад
Wunderkammer Magazine catches Jimmy LaValle of The Album Leaf in Sacramento, and he talks about his new album "A Chorus of Storytellers" and the joys and woes of being a musician for ten years. The Album Leaf www.thealbumleaf.com More reviews at: www.wunderkammermag.com Directed by J.M. Harper www.jmharpermedia.com
Wunderkammer Artist Series: The Swimmers
Просмотров 52314 лет назад
We meet up with The Swimmers near midnight at an apartment in Brooklyn, and they play a few tunes for us and discuss their new album "People Are Soft". More interviews at: www.wunderkammermag.com Directed by J.M. Harper www.jmharpermedia.com
Wunderkammer Artist Series: David Bazan
Просмотров 4,2 тыс.14 лет назад
David Bazan (formerly of Pedro the Lion) talks about his new album "Curse Your Branches" and we catch him at a live show at the beautiful Lincoln Theater in Chicago. More interviews at: www.wunderkammermag.com Directed by J.M. Harper www.jmharpermedia.com
Wunderkammer Artist Series: Louis & The Hunt
Просмотров 82714 лет назад
Ryne Estwing of Louis & The Hunt invites us into his apartment where he records, and we get a taste of a live show at Schubas Tavern in Chicago. More interviews at: www.wunderkammermag.com Directed by J.M. Harper www.jmharpermedia.com

Комментарии

  • @ianmhwalling
    @ianmhwalling 2 года назад

    Jeffrey Stout is beloved to me. So nice to see this appreciation of him.

  • @paulnurmi302
    @paulnurmi302 5 лет назад

    I have no idea what this guy is talking about. I read Moltmann's Crucified God years ago and with difficulty understood what he was getting at. But why not just say what the hell you mean instead of babbling on and on without ever saying anything clearly?

    • @770rx
      @770rx 5 лет назад

      Welcome to Stanley Hauerwas. He does this all the time.

  • @DarkMoonDroid
    @DarkMoonDroid 10 лет назад

    Yes. I am a Recovering Evangelical, so I've been there and done that. It's true. The reaction against waiting upon the graces of flawed human beings to bestow forgiveness or whatever upon you has driven the extreme rejection of "receiving" God or Truth or whatever you think you can just "make up". Extreme flaws beget extreme flaws. Nuthin new there. Question is: How do we avoid extreme flaws in general without being so luke-warm that we give Jesus the dry heaves? <3

  • @Matiyahu
    @Matiyahu 10 лет назад

    Waaaay too much scripture pointing to the necessity, let alone reality, of a personal relationship with Christ for Hauerwas's position to hold up.

  • @richardbaldwin7944
    @richardbaldwin7944 11 лет назад

    This fellow has a problem being explicit! Talk about beating around the bush!

    • @vecumex9466
      @vecumex9466 6 лет назад

      Really, you have attributed a trait to Stanley that puts you at odds with 99% of academics.

  • @mjclawson
    @mjclawson 12 лет назад

    Did Stanley say anything of substance here besides "I don't like it"? Until the end, I didn't hear any actual reasons given for his disagreement. And his dichotomy of "control vs. non-control" seems like a mischaracterization of Moltmann. What Hauerwas calls "control," Moltmann would more likely call "engagement." Should Christians be engaged in the world, struggling alongside others for justice and the common good, or should we be, as Stanley says "genuinely glad to be out of it"?

    • @770rx
      @770rx 5 лет назад

      When Hauerwas says he doesn't want Christians in "control" he doesn't just mean theocratic government. He means he doesn't think the church should just be one voice in dialogue in the public sphere. Hauerwas's ecclesiology is so high and his pneumatology so low that the "world" is anything that is outside of the Church and is, therefore, worldly and corrupt. His ecclesiology to me is incoherent and has no basis in reality; his view of the world seems to sanction Christian "close-mindedness." There is no room left for something outside of Christianity (outside the Bible, Church, Christian experience, etc.) to critique and it be entertained as possibly legitimate.

  • @BrendtWaters
    @BrendtWaters 12 лет назад

    @uhmerikangeezus Oh puhleeeeeze. We evangelicals invented pigeon-holing and dividing the body into pieces. It's practically our raison d'être.

  • @breath35
    @breath35 13 лет назад

    Hauerwas' theological politics reflects a genuine content to be out of control while not uncritically sanctifying/sanctioning the status quo. This differentiates him from the Moltmannian project: one's definition of freedom rests in peace of mind being out of control, the other's lies in the ability to control.