PRIZES to win! PROMOTIONS

Close Notification

Your cart does not contain any items

On the Voices, Contexts and Tasks of Theology

Experiments in Quaker and Feminist Thought

Professor Rachel Muers (University of Edinburgh, UK)

$170

Hardback

Not in-store but you can order this
How long will it take?

QTY:

English
T.& T.Clark Ltd
13 November 2025
Who is Christian theology for, what is it for, and what can it do? Rachel Muers explores the voice of Christian theology – the relationship between the subject of theology and theological discourse.

The book begins with the question ‘how does someone speak of God?’, understood not as a question about the criteria or authorised sources for theology, but as a question of what is going on when theology is done. How is it possible to speak as this particular historical embodied subject about God?

Muers investigates voice through engagement with historical and contemporary theologians, particularly but not only with women who are speaking from relatively marginalised positions and contending with the lack of societal authorisation for their theological work. Recognising that the question of ‘voice’ is often equated in the contemporary context with the representation of identities and with how spaces and institutions can facilitate that representation, the narrative considers more directly how questions of identity and context – particularly in relation to gender – shape the construction and representation of systematic theology, and of theological tradition. Muers examines the vocation of theology, particularly in the contemporary Western academy and alongside other ‘humanities’ subjects, and a concluding chapter sets out a vision for ecumenical theological work. The book draws extensively on the author’s own Quaker tradition and on her experience of teaching and mentoring theologians.
By:  
Imprint:   T.& T.Clark Ltd
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 236mm,  Width: 154mm,  Spine: 18mm
Weight:   440g
ISBN:   9780567721259
ISBN 10:   0567721256
Pages:   192
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Part 1: Raising Voices Chapter 1 Overview: Speaking Experimentally Chapter 2 Let Us Hear Your Voice: Encouragement to New Theologians Chapter 3 Thinking With Julian About Doing Theology Part 2: Finding Voices in Quaker Tradition Chapter 4 Speaking, Justified Chapter 5 The Seed and the Day of Small Things Chapter 6 When Christ is a Tyrant: John Woolman's Silence Chapter 7 Notes on Nonconformist Public Theology Part 3: Finding Voices in Theological Systems Chapter 8 A Systematics Of One’s Own Chapter 9 Where do Women’s Voices Come From? Chapter 10 The Love Lives of Great Theologians Chapter 11 Hearing Shibboleth Part 4: Voices in Place Chapter 12 Theology in the Fabric of the Secular University (Leeds) Chapter 13 Divinity Among The Humanities (Edinburgh) Chapter 14 ‘I Was Glad’ Bibliography Index

Rachel Muers is Chair of Divinity at the University of Edinburgh, UK.

Reviews for On the Voices, Contexts and Tasks of Theology: Experiments in Quaker and Feminist Thought

This book makes me hopeful for the future of theology. Muers draws us into the unruly crowd of people who do in fact speak about God, and who take care over the coherence and implications of what they say. Introducing us to members of this crowd who are very much not amongst the usual suspects, she shows us how to attend to the emergence of their voices, to the compulsions that drive them, to the spaces their speaking makes for itself, and to their refusals to be silenced or made decorous. She is a deft, generous and enthusiastic guide to all this irrepressible speech, and her book stands as an invitation to attend and to join in. * Mike Higton, Durham University, UK * Muers has brought exceptional clarity and insight, as well as a deep grounding in faith, to the subject of how theologians approach their tasks and contexts. This is a work of astonishing range and virtuosity, with something in it to appeal to anyone interested in Christian theology or interfaith dialogue. Her generosity and ecumenicity are strongly in evidence in this book. The way she engages her positionality as both a Quaker and a feminist helps to bring to the surface perspectives in truth, compassion, and liberation that desperately need an audience in the twenty-first century world. * Stephen W. Angell, Earlham School of Religion, USA *


See Also