Ian A. McFarland, David A. S. Fergusson, Karen Kilby and
Iain R. Torrance (eds.), The Cambridge Dictionary of Christian Theology (New York: Cambridge University Press,
2011)
ISBN: 978-0-521-88092-3
Price: £130.00 / US$ 199.00
I am grateful to
Cambridge University Press for the review
copy.
The Christian doctrine of providence is well represented in The Cambridge Dictionary of Christian
Theology. ‘Providence’ is listed as a core entry, which means that the
entry should be regarded as a framework for understanding a number of other,
shorter entries. Thus the reader can expect to read separate entries on ‘Concursus’, ‘Conservatio’, and ‘Gubernatio’;
on ‘Divine Action’ and ‘Panentheism’; and on ‘Middle Knowledge’ and
‘Occasionalism’. ‘Process Theology’, which is something I’ve never really
looked at in any depth beyond a couple of books, is a core entry, with links to
entries such as ‘Theodicy’ and ‘Sin’, as well as to ‘Open Theism’.
Interestingly, there is no entry on ‘Causation’, though an acceptance of the validity
of the concept permeates much of the Cambridge
Dictionary’s content.
So what is dealt with in David Fergusson’s core entry on
providence (pp. 416–419)? Fergusson mentions significant moments, and major
players, in the development of the doctrine. He refers to Stoic influence; to
Thomas Aquinas; to John Calvin; to the Protestant work ethic; to American
exceptionalism. He notes the threefold pattern of providence (conservatio, concursus and gubernatio);
the distinctions between primary and secondary causation, and general and
special providence; and Karl Barth’s major revision of the doctrine. To close,
Fergusson attends to various other revisionist approaches such as process
theology and open theism. In summary, Fergusson’s article probably covers the
most important elements in the history of the doctrine in the Christian West.
Someone researching the doctrine of providence for the first can do worse than
to read this article and Fergusson’s other articles on providence (see here and
here, plus his essays in God’s Life in Trinity and The Providence of God).
Robert John Russell’s entry on divine action (pp. 142–144)
primarily deals with how we can say God acts in the world, particularly from
the perspective of those who advocate non-interventionist objective divine
action (NIODA). Thus a significant part of the entry outlines six different
approaches to NIODA: top–down (Philip Clayton and Nancy Murphy); whole–part
(Arthur Peacocke); lateral–amplification (John Polkinghorne); bottom-up (Thomas
Tracy and Russell himself); primary and secondary causation (Denis Edwards and
William Stoeger); and process theology (Ian Barbour). Russell defines and
offers a brief criticism of each position, including his own bottom-up
approach.
In the next – and final – part of this review, I shall
consider the pros and cons of the Cambridge
Dictionary.
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