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Engaging with the many debates about the meaning and character of Bonhoeffer’s late resistance theology and action, particularly as it relates to his participation in the attempted coup d'état against Hitler, this book attends to Bonhoeffer’s understanding of the exception. Resisting the common reduction of the exception to a political or ethical concept, O'Farrell argues that the exception for Bonhoeffer is an extraordinary moment in history that disarms persons, impinging on one’s understanding of politics and ethics.

Through a wide engagement with the Bonhoeffer corpus, this book claims that this leads to distinctive narrations of key concepts in Bonhoeffer’s corpus: responsibility, the free venture, simple obedience, and action beyond the law. It also offers a different portrait of Bonhoeffer to contemporary narrations. The Bonhoeffer that emerges is neither a Niebuhrian realist, a pacifist, or a religious fanatic, but one who is impelled to act apart from the law without this action becoming arbitrary. This Bonhoeffer provides a hopeful political witness that seeks a world beyond the conflicts and divisions of this age.
By:  
Edited by:   , ,
Imprint:   T.& T.Clark Ltd
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm,  Spine: 25mm
Weight:   454g
ISBN:   9780567709448
ISBN 10:   0567709442
Series:   T&T Clark New Studies in Bonhoeffer’s Theology and Ethics
Pages:   200
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Primary
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming

Kevin O’Farrell is Director of Theological Education & Engagement at Joni and Friends, USA.

Reviews for Dietrich Bonhoeffer and a Theology of the Exception

""Bonhoeffer's involvement in the plot to kill Hitler has been one of the most discussed and contested aspects of his witness. Kevin O'Farrell deftly shows us why so much of that attention is misguided wish-fulfilment. Bonhoeffer was neither a freewheeling existentialist nor a heroic warrior against evil. He was a theologian first and foremost who saw that faithful Christian action is oriented by a fundamentally Christocentric logic through which the vagaries of history and the violence within it are revealed in a totally unexpected light."" --Brian Brock, University of Aberdeen, UK ""This is a remarkable book - in terms of its analysis and mode of reasoning. It provides an in-depth and hermeneutically sophisticated reading of Bonhoeffer's language of the exception and its cognates that places the concept concretely within Bonhoeffer's theologically-inflicted account of history. What emerges in the process is not the image of the heroic and ingenuous moral agent but of a decentered self that is overwhelmed amidst the fragmentariness and tragedy of life by God's creative and empowering action. A highly original and compelling contribution to Bonhoeffer studies!"" --Robert Vosloo, Stellenbosch University, South Africa


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