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Wiley InterScience | ||||||||
![]() The Heythrop JournalVolume 48 Issue 6, Pages 858 - 877 Published Online: 3 Oct 2007 Journal compilation © 2010 Trustees for Roman Catholic Purposes Registered
Abstract | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 132K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking THE POLITICAL NATURE OF DOCTRINE: A CRITIQUE OF LINDBECK IN LIGHT OF RECENT SCHOLARSHIP Copyright © Trustees for Roman Catholic Purposes Registered 2007 ABSTRACTThis article argues that the power of religion to shape experience presupposes the mobilization of religious identity through social opposition. This thesis is developed through a critique of George Lindbeck's The Nature of Doctrine. The article first examines Lindbeck's thesis that religion shapes experience in light of Talal Asad's critique of Geertz's concept of religion. It argues that in order to understand how 'religion' shapes experience we must look outside the immanent sphere of cultural-religious meaning that Lindbeck, following Geertz, identifies with 'religion'. Religious authority ultimately derives from the recognition of a social group. Next, looking at the nature of doctrine in light of Kathryn Tanner's thesis that Christian identity is essentially relational, it argues that church doctrines function to mobilize group identity through social opposition. In this respect they resemble the mobilizing slogans of political discourse more than, as Lindbeck's theory proposes, the grammatical rules governing Wittgensteinian language games. |
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