1st Edition

Richard Hooker, Beyond Certainty

By Andrea Russell Copyright 2017
    212 Pages
    by Routledge

    212 Pages
    by Routledge

    In spite of the differing, and often conflicting interpretations, there have been several constants – beliefs about Hooker and his work – that have remained virtually unchallenged throughout the centuries. Richard Hooker, Beyond Certainty examines and calls into question three of these constants. The first to be challenged is the fundamental belief that Hooker is attached securely to the English Church and that their identities are so interwoven that to speak of one is to speak of the other. The second is that Hooker's prose – his unique writing style and powerful rhetoric – can be ignored in the process of assessing his theology. The third is the widely-held belief that, as the 'champion of reason', Hooker's faith is essentially rational and that God is perceived and experienced primarily through the intellect. Challenging the truth of each of these statements leads to an uncertainty about Hooker which, rather than negating scholarship, allows research to be liberated from the dominance of categorisation. Such a change, it is suggested, would acknowledge that Hooker's theology transcends Anglican studies and allows his radical thinking to reach a wider audience.

    Introduction







    1. Richard Hooker: Defender, Apologist and Champion of the Church?






    2. Hooker’s Style and Rhetoric






    3. Hooker and Certainty




    Conclusion

    Biography

    Andrea Russell studied Law at King's College London and went on to practice as a solicitor before gaining a BA, MA and PhD in theology at the University of Nottingham. Having taught at both the University of Nottingham and St. John's Theological College, Nottingham she is now Anglican tutor at The Queen's Foundation for Ecumenical Theological Education in Birmingham, as well as a Priest in the Anglican Church.