Becoming good in Africa: A critical appraisal of Stanley Hauerwas� ecclesial ethic in the sub-Saharan context

<p>The present article examines the appropriateness of Stanley Hauerwas� ecclesial ethic for the sub-Saharan African churches. Thus, it consists in a Christian ethical assessment of the metaethical foundational categories of his ecclesial ethic. In brief, his proposal is eclectic and pluri-dis...

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Main Author: Charles K. Bafinamene
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: AOSIS 2017-01-01
Series:Verbum et Ecclesia
Subjects:
Online Access:http://verbumetecclesia.org.za/index.php/VE/article/view/1716
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spelling doaj-6419726576ba49cc8767b5a1bf81f08c2020-11-25T00:29:15ZafrAOSISVerbum et Ecclesia 1609-99822074-77052017-01-0138110.4102/ve.v38i1.17161400Becoming good in Africa: A critical appraisal of Stanley Hauerwas� ecclesial ethic in the sub-Saharan contextCharles K. Bafinamene0Department of Dogmatics & Christian Ethics, University of Pretoria<p>The present article examines the appropriateness of Stanley Hauerwas� ecclesial ethic for the sub-Saharan African churches. Thus, it consists in a Christian ethical assessment of the metaethical foundational categories of his ecclesial ethic. In brief, his proposal is eclectic and pluri-disciplinarily applicable to the churches of various denominations. It reflects the marks of the Aristotelian ethical tradition endorsed by Thomas Aquinas and recovered by several communitarian philosophers. It also includes some discernible ecclesio-centric and postliberal theological accents. The promising insights of this proposal include: (1) the necessity to ordain the church�s worship, polity and its entire way of life to the spiritual and moral formation of church members; (2) the stress on Christian virtuous life, identity formation, witness and non-conformism in social ethics. However, essentially designed against the background of a Western, liberal, autonomous and individualist self, Hauerwas� ecclesial ethic is not a definitive answer for the holistic, normative and communalist moral self, characteristic of the traditional African ethos and influencing a large majority in Africa. Moreover, it stresses the purity of the church in a way that restricts cooperation between Christians and nonChristians for socio-economic justice and the common good.</p><p><strong>Intradisciplinary and/or interdisciplinary implications: </strong>Therefore, Hauerwas� virtue, narrative, community and social ethics provide some valuable insights for moral formation in African churches as it explores the interplay between ecclesiology, Christian ethics, practical theology and philosophical ethics. For sure, other relevant resources should come from African spirituality, developmental psychology and sociology of religion.</p>http://verbumetecclesia.org.za/index.php/VE/article/view/1716churchethicsHauerwasAfricavirtuecharacternarrativecommunitysocial ethics
collection DOAJ
language Afrikaans
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Charles K. Bafinamene
spellingShingle Charles K. Bafinamene
Becoming good in Africa: A critical appraisal of Stanley Hauerwas� ecclesial ethic in the sub-Saharan context
Verbum et Ecclesia
church
ethics
Hauerwas
Africa
virtue
character
narrative
community
social ethics
author_facet Charles K. Bafinamene
author_sort Charles K. Bafinamene
title Becoming good in Africa: A critical appraisal of Stanley Hauerwas� ecclesial ethic in the sub-Saharan context
title_short Becoming good in Africa: A critical appraisal of Stanley Hauerwas� ecclesial ethic in the sub-Saharan context
title_full Becoming good in Africa: A critical appraisal of Stanley Hauerwas� ecclesial ethic in the sub-Saharan context
title_fullStr Becoming good in Africa: A critical appraisal of Stanley Hauerwas� ecclesial ethic in the sub-Saharan context
title_full_unstemmed Becoming good in Africa: A critical appraisal of Stanley Hauerwas� ecclesial ethic in the sub-Saharan context
title_sort becoming good in africa: a critical appraisal of stanley hauerwas� ecclesial ethic in the sub-saharan context
publisher AOSIS
series Verbum et Ecclesia
issn 1609-9982
2074-7705
publishDate 2017-01-01
description <p>The present article examines the appropriateness of Stanley Hauerwas� ecclesial ethic for the sub-Saharan African churches. Thus, it consists in a Christian ethical assessment of the metaethical foundational categories of his ecclesial ethic. In brief, his proposal is eclectic and pluri-disciplinarily applicable to the churches of various denominations. It reflects the marks of the Aristotelian ethical tradition endorsed by Thomas Aquinas and recovered by several communitarian philosophers. It also includes some discernible ecclesio-centric and postliberal theological accents. The promising insights of this proposal include: (1) the necessity to ordain the church�s worship, polity and its entire way of life to the spiritual and moral formation of church members; (2) the stress on Christian virtuous life, identity formation, witness and non-conformism in social ethics. However, essentially designed against the background of a Western, liberal, autonomous and individualist self, Hauerwas� ecclesial ethic is not a definitive answer for the holistic, normative and communalist moral self, characteristic of the traditional African ethos and influencing a large majority in Africa. Moreover, it stresses the purity of the church in a way that restricts cooperation between Christians and nonChristians for socio-economic justice and the common good.</p><p><strong>Intradisciplinary and/or interdisciplinary implications: </strong>Therefore, Hauerwas� virtue, narrative, community and social ethics provide some valuable insights for moral formation in African churches as it explores the interplay between ecclesiology, Christian ethics, practical theology and philosophical ethics. For sure, other relevant resources should come from African spirituality, developmental psychology and sociology of religion.</p>
topic church
ethics
Hauerwas
Africa
virtue
character
narrative
community
social ethics
url http://verbumetecclesia.org.za/index.php/VE/article/view/1716
work_keys_str_mv AT charleskbafinamene becominggoodinafricaacriticalappraisalofstanleyhauerwasecclesialethicinthesubsaharancontext
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