Ebook
Hope is a widespread, if not a universal, human experience. For centuries, followers of Jesus of Nazareth have ordered their lives around a central hope. How is their experience similar to or different from others who live by hope? This book seeks an answer in the idea that living by hope involves living within a peculiar story of the world--an incomplete story. The stories that shape these hopes are threatened by evil, however it may be defined. The hopeful struggle as characters caught up in plots that move toward resolution. They exercise an as-yet unverified hope that evil will not prevail. In this regard, the hope of Christians is similar to others. Yet, it is different because they wait for the God of Jesus to transform the world to match the promise he made to Abraham. To arrive at this conclusion, this book takes a detour through four model life-organizing stories. Christians and participants in other stories-of-the-world may not agree on the ultimate ground for hope. However, taking a detour into the hopeful experience of another may help uncover a place where rivals can stand together long enough to talk.
“Michael Zeigler’s insightful text rightly
returns us to the immense power of life-organizing stories. The
Christian description of reality continues to mold and shape our
individual narratives, imbibing them with meaning found in the
cross and empty tomb—the place where the essential conflict between
God, sin, and humanity is resolved. Ever
gracious, Christian Hope Among
Rivals invites Christians into
meaningful conversation with other traditions without surrendering
the profound hope that is offered in Christ alone.”
—Joel Oesch, Associate Professor of Theology, Concordia University
Irvine
“Michael Zeigler ventures into the thickets of our
everyday confrontations with a variety of forms of evil and of the
various solutions offered by contemporary proposals for explaining
our dilemmas. In this volume he demonstrates that an understanding
of how we fit into the grand narrative of God’s and humankind’s
unfolding history provides the only sure-footed hope—that which is
found in Christ and his death and resurrection—for finding one’s
way through the challenges of our age. This is a work of exciting
theological experimentation and a valuable aid for daily life and
for spiritual, pastoral care of self and others.”
—Robert Kolb, Professor of Systematic Theology Emeritus, Concordia
Seminary, Saint Louis, Missouri
“Zeigler’s significant work offers a rigorously argued
and important update of narrative theology and compelling
intellectual history of theodicy and evil. Zeigler’s pastoral voice
appears occasionally as he deftly integrates speech act and
narrative theory alongside theology and philosophy, culminating in
a clear conception of Christian hope. Even readers disinclined to
share his conviction will find a very worthwhile, thoughtful, and
compelling analysis of hope and evil well-suited for our
twenty-first-century world.
—Daniel Boscaljon, author of Vigilant Faith: Passionate
Agnosticism in a Secular World
“Zeigler models honest engagement in an
environment where Christian thought is no longer the starting point
for dialogue. By opening us up to rival ‘life-organizing stories,’
he demonstrates clearly what makes Christian hope truly unique:
Jesus. With an academic mind and a pastoral heart, Zeigler offers
not only a new way of thinking about Christian hope, but a new way
of thinking about theology. Read this book.”
—Justin Rossow, Senior Pastor, St.
Luke Lutheran Church, Ann Arbor, Michigan
“Christian Hope Among Rivals invites its
reader—Christian or otherwise—to self-understanding and
respectful dialogue. Zeigler shows that every
attempt to ‘make sense’ of the world that we all know results
in a life-organizing story that offers hope. Zeigler
helps Christians readers find emphatic contact with
others who do not trust in the Triune
God. He encourages Christians to live in the hope rooted
in Jesus—crucified, risen, and returning—even as we invite others
to embrace Jesus and become part of the story enacted and promised
through him.”
—Jeff Gibbs, Concordia Seminary, St. Louis,
Missouri
Michael Zeigler lives in St. Louis, Missouri, and serves there as pastor of Epiphany Lutheran Church and as adjunct instructor of Systematic Theology at Concordia Seminary.
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