Structures of Sin, Cultures of Meaning

Social Science and Theology, Second Edition

by M. D. Litonjua


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Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 1/9/2007

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 8.25x11
Page Count : 376
ISBN : 9781425971793

About the Book

With the inductive and historicist turn in theological method, the social sciences

have become an important handmaid of theology. The interaction between theology and the social sciences, however, has been characterized, on the one hand, as one of alliance, and, on the other, as one of conflict. Structures of Sin, Cultures of Meaning seeks to advance the dialogue and collaboration between them.

            Social science considers religion primarily as a social institution and as a cultural system. The first part of the book explains what a social institution is, why religion is a social institution, and elaborates on its implications for theology in such areas as the bureaucratization of religion, the formation of the structures of injustice, the preferential option for the poor. Three additional chapters discuss the failure of collegiality at Vatican II, the relationship of religion to the social institutions of the economy and of politics.

            The second part elucidates on what a cultural system is, why religion is a cultural system, and its consequences for theology in such areas as religious identity and community, Christian ethics and formation, evangelization and inculturation. Three additional chapters deal with the anthropology of religion, secularization and fundamentalism, and religious conflict and violence.

            The social structures and cultures of the past impinge on those of the present to create the challenges of today and the possibilities for tomorrow. People make history and do theology in the circumstances created by social structures and cultures of meaning.


About the Author

 

M. D. Litonjua is professor of sociology at the College of Mount St. Joseph, Cincinnati, Ohio. Originally from the Philippines, he taught theology at the Ateneo de Manila University. He has Licentiates in Philosophy and Theology from the University of Santo Tomas (Manila), a Ph. D. in Sociology from Brown University, and an M.B.A. from the University of Missouri at St. Louis. He is the author of Liberation Theology: The Paradigm Shift, and Critical Intersections: Religion and Society. He has also published in Theology Today, Journal of Hispanic/Latino Theology, Studies in Comparative International Development, Chicago Studies, Philippine Studies, and International Review of Modern Sociology.