Gustavo Gutiérrez and the Liberative Sight of Christ
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How can we speak of God as Father in a world that is inhumane? While many engagements with Gutiérrez's theology centre on such themes as the option for the poor, the role of praxis, or the Kingdom of God, in Gustavo Gutiérrez and the Liberative Sight of Christ Luke Foster explores the underlying theological convictions and commitments within which these concepts cohere. By developing an analysis that is attentive to the unity and coherence of Gutiérrez's thought, Foster resources a critique that is distinctive not only in its pertinence but also in the possibilities that it opens for the development of his project in the future. Innovatively offering a systemic account of Gutiérrez's theology, this book offers both an indispensable overview for those who are engaging with Gutiérrez for the first time and a distinctive analysis for those who are seeking to deepen their understanding of his work.
"Foster invites us to listen carefully to Gutiérrez’s voice and to reflect on ‘what it means to be a church in Christ’. This is a beautifully written and persuasively argued case for seeing Gutiérrez’s work as a liberative gift to the global church." -- David Tombs
"An exciting, moving, critical, and competent analysis of Gustavo Gutiérrez’ contribution to a theology of the poor and the ‘inhumane world’, by a Christian who has been in the October 2019 Chilean trenches of petrol bombs, fire, and ocular trauma! A must read for all pastors and theologians at the trenches of global violence, poverty, and inhuman justice today!" -- Mario I. Aguilar
Luke Foster offers a fresh systematic reading of Gustavo Gutiérrez’s thought through the lens of Christological anthropology. Foster approaches Gutiérrez neither as uncritical follower nor as polemical critic, but as a theologian from a different ecclesial tradition seeking to discern and reflect on the shape of Gutiérrez’ thought as a whole. With his volume reception of Gutierrez, it seems to me, enters into a new phase. -- Karen Kilby