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Down & out : parallels and divergences in structure and method between the theological responses of Martin Luther and contextual theologies to their times.

The thesis compares the structure of the theological responses of Martin Luther and contextual

theologies , especially those of Juan Luis Segundo and Albert Nolan. The structure of the theologies

are described using concepts derived from the methodologies of research programmes developed by

Imre Lakatos. The social and ideological background of the ruling ideology of Luther's time (medieval

Catholicism) and that of contextual theologies (neo-colonial capitalism) are presented . Parallels are

found in that the ruling ideology utilises a monopoly on legitimating authority to orientate the life

energies of people to achieving legitimation in terms of norms set up by the ruling class. These norms

result in a an exchange of work for legitimation, and so exploit people. This constitutes an 'in and up'

theology: Resources are drawn in in order to climb up to a position of legitimation . Both Luther and

contextual theologies respond by reversing this pattern, decoupling legitimation from the norms of the

ruling class and the work of people. They constitute 'down and out' theologies: God, the legitimator,

is down with people, and because legitimation is given freely to people down where they are, energies

flow out to serve the common good. Dissimilarities between Luther and Contextual Theologies are

found in the locus of legitimation (individual vs. social), the role of faith, and the negative heuristic

(dialectic of the cross vs. transformation of the system). It is argued that the difference in negative

heuristic is mainly responsible for the perennial nature and conservatism of Lutheran Theology versus

the rapid demise of South African contextual theology. The results of the investigation show that the

conceptual structure of Lakatos' epistemology, coupled with an analysis of the flow of legitimation and

orientation, is useful in structuring and evaluating theological systems on the questions where does

legitimation come from, where to does the theology orientate, and how are orientation and legitimation

linked. These questions may be seen as a new way of formulating the lawl gospel distinction of

classical Lutheran theology. / Thesis (M.Th.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2004.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:ukzn/oai:http://researchspace.ukzn.ac.za:10413/1756
Date January 2004
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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