Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Emerging Scholars

Double Particularity: Karl Barth, Contextuality, and Asian American Theology

Rate this book
Double Particularity is a constructive proposal for theological methodology addressing the Asian American context using the theology of Karl Barth. It focuses primarily on employing Barth's theology to develop a methodology for engaging the Asian American context. This methodological focus means that it is an integrative and synthetic work, bringing seemingly disparate thoughts and concepts together. Here, the Asian American context serves as an important case study.

With the center of worldwide Christianity moving to the global South, and even as American Christianity becomes more reflective of immigrant populations, the theological need for a deeper engagement with context is more urgent than ever. Karl Barth, particularly his thought on election, Christology, and reconciliation, offers much wisdom and insight for the churches of the majority world and for these ethnic churches, even though he is often seen as just a figure in the Western historical tradition. Hence, this study is a contribution to the development of a connection between Barth and contextual theology, to the stimulation and enrichment of both.

239 pages, Kindle Edition

Published May 1, 2017

2 people are currently reading
4 people want to read

About the author

Daniel D. Lee

39 books3 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
1 (50%)
4 stars
0 (0%)
3 stars
1 (50%)
2 stars
0 (0%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 of 1 review
Profile Image for Sooho Lee.
224 reviews21 followers
February 9, 2018
Theology is a saturated academic field, yet there is dire need for constructive Asian American theology. Double Particularity is a commendable attempt to fill a part of that enormous need. And, no, this is not “Asian theology,” though it very much appreciates and stands on the shoulders of Asian theologies. Demarking the difference between Asian and Asian American is crucial here, and one often missed both under popular and academic eyes.

Double Particularity does two main things: appropriates Karl Barth’s massive theology and constructs a dynamic hermeneutical lens for the varied Asian American experiences — the Asian American Quadrilateral (AAQ). The four components of AAQ are (1) Asian heritage, (2) migration, (3) American culture, and (4) racialization. All four operate in Asian Americans lives with astounding variation: 3rd generation Chinese Americans navigate San Fransciso differently than, say, the Vietnamese refugee in Los Angeles. Daniel D. Lee encourages Asian Americans to be aware of themselves and their environment through the AAQ. Instead of frozen descriptions of themselves (“All Asian Americans are like ___”), which leads to essentialism, the AAQ allows both fluidity and concreteness — one can ground emotions and experiences in one or more of these four categories. But the final word does not come from them; it comes from outside ourselves and to us through the “humanity of God” in Jesus. Barth’s mature christological ground says that God reconciles with us through Jesus: we are justified, sancified, and called to vocation in Spirit. These three give us “dialectical grammer for cultural engagement.” For example, parts of our AAQ must be justified: God says his No and Yes to them. God’s No is refusing any one part or parts of AAQ to have the final word over us, but God’s Yes is embracing those parts, which leads to his work of santification and calling to vocation in us. The final product of Barth’s triplex gratia (justification, sanctification, and vocation) and AAQ is a nimble framework to be aware of our Asian American experiences, interpret them with and against the scriptures and tradition, and allow God’s gracious Yes to speak over us.

Daniel D. Lee, director of the Asian American Center at Fuller Theological Seminary has done us (Asian, Asian Americans, and others) a tremendous work of breaking the theological-bamboo ceiling.

cf. www.sooholee.com
Displaying 1 of 1 review

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.