This week I got a comment & question based on a statement I made in an earlier post that stated:

“They (critics of Christianity) won’t regard the serious academic theologians in their arguments, preferring instead to attack featherweights like Warren and McLaren.”

Who are the lightweight, welterweight, middleweight, light heavyweight, and heavyweight serious academic theologians?

First, let me say that I wasn’t taking a poke at Warren and McLaren.  McLaren confesses in his writings that he hasn’t studied much theology before the modern era, and Warren sticks to the basics at best.  As I consider the best way to answer the question, let me share with you how I would define the various “weight classes.”  These are purely my own opinions, and may be subjective in the extreme.

Heavyweight — those who do foundational theological reflection, characterized by originality, deep philosophical and practical reflection, and challenging the status quo and conventional wisdom of the day.  Those who shape the thinking of others in significant ways.  Identifying a heavyweight in no way implies that I agree with everything they say — only that their influence is unmistakable.

Light heavyweight — those who synthesize and adapt the deep theological reflections of the heavyweights.  Not original thinkers, but incredibly adept at “connecting the dots” of others.

Middle weights — those who recycle important concepts into modern language and culture.  Much of the thinking is derivative at best, but while there is little or no originality, there is a powerful ability to communicate and impact people’s thinking.

Light/welter/featherweights — those whose thinking is derivative and fairly simplistic.  This is not to say that there is no value in the theology, just that it is basic and offers substance to newcomers and novices only.  Those who have “trained, practiced, and conditioned” for more challenging matches will find little helpful or valuable here for their own continued development.  I’m not going to name specific writers/thinkers/theologians in this category because I don’t want to sound like I am devaluing what they offer to the church.  They primarily provide an entrance into the faith.

Heavyweights:

Pre-modern: Augustine, Aquinas, Luther, Calvin, Boehme, author of The Cloud of Unknowing, Hildegard of Bingen, Julian of Norwich, Fox

Modern (post-modern?): Brueggemann, Helmut Thielke, Jurgen Moltmann, Catherine Keller, Karl Barth, Robert Funk

These thinkers delve into the depths and offer provocative challenges to faith.  They point us in new directions and raise more questions than answers.  Whole schools of belief arise from their teaching and philosophies.  They may incite great controversy, but they always invite engagement with the “deep” issues of faith, life, death, morality, change, hope, and our relationships with God, Christ, and Spirit.

Light-heavyweights:

Pre-modern: Francis of Assisi, Wesley, Zwingli, Albright, Thomas Kelly

Modern: Neill Hamilton, Stanley Hauerwas, Bishop Willimon, Borg, Crossan, A.W. Tozer

These thinkers don’t contribute many new thoughts, but they reframe existing thinking in innovative and compelling ways.  They generate energy by synthesizing elements of many other thinkers, and construct new ways of looking at the “old, old story.”  John Wesley was not an original thinker, but he was a brilliant synthesizer — drawing from a wide variety of sources to assemble the framework for modern Methodism.  No one has influenced my own personal theology and philosophy more than Neill Q. Hamilton.

Middle-weights:

Modern: C.S. Lewis, Richard Foster, Phyllis Tickle, Parker Palmer, Walter Wink

Before anyone gets offended and thinks “middle-weight” is a put-down of some sort, my only distinction (personal) here is that in these people’s writing it is difficult to find anything new (though there is much that is novel).  All of them are saying what dozens (hundreds?) of others have already said, but they are saying it anew.  They share their best thinking and observations about what is common knowledge (if you’ve spent much time in the church or in reading Christian literature).

I also would add a list of non-Christian/philosophical thinkers who are heavyweights/light-heavyweights, but not theologians.  To this group I would add Ken Wilber, Edwin Friedman, Peter Senge and Peter Block.

I generated this list off the top of my head, therefore it is incomplete and  not deeply thought-through.  I present it with all the seriousness of a bar game (think: Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon).  Who would you put on the list?  How would you rearrange what I have?  Who would you dump?  Who would you add as essential?  Play with the idea and share.

25 responses to “Theological Smackdown”

  1. Carter Garrigues-Cortelyou Avatar
    Carter Garrigues-Cortelyou

    This is fun!

    Dietrich Bonhoeffer: Light Heavyweight before his involvement in plot to kill Hitler. Had he survived, he may well have moved up to heavyweight division as “Letters and Papers from Prison” has some remarkably provocative stuff in there.

    Hans Kung: Heavyweight for the mass and depth of his work and for the controversy it created in its context. Had Pope John XXIII or Pope John Paul, the First, lived longer, Kung would have laid the theological foundation for a transformation of The Roman Catholic Church.

    Marva Dawn: Middle-weight as exemplified in books like “Reaching Out without Dumbing Down” which draw deeply from the ancient wisdom of tradition, bringing a long perspective to seemingly urgent questions.

    1. Carter Garrigues-Cortelyou Avatar
      Carter Garrigues-Cortelyou

      More . . .

      Gustavo Guttierez and Leonardo Boff, heavyweights for their theology and ecclesiology, respectively, within Latin American liberation movement, including religious praxis as a fundamental task of grounding the Church in its context and mission.

      1. doroteos2 Avatar
        doroteos2

        Good ones! I haven’t encountered either for years and they both fell from my radar screen…

  2. dave Avatar
    dave

    Paul Tillich?

    For me, I am finding a new way of looking at things through the writing of Diarmuid O’Murchu, exploring the intersection of quantum physics and thinking about ultimate things.

    Somewhere along a line, perhaps not in “theologians” proper but surely in popularizing theological thinking IMO, would be John Spong.

    1. doroteos2 Avatar
      doroteos2

      Tillich, the Niebuhrs, Bonhoeffer, Teilhard de Chardin.. I keep thinking of more all the time.

  3. John Meunier Avatar
    John Meunier

    Who would I add? Paul. Heavyweight.

  4. John Meunier Avatar
    John Meunier

    Interesting lists and categories.

    I was surprised to find Brueggemann on your heavyweights list and Hauerwas on the light-heavies. From my limited and poorly informed vantage point, I would have expected them to be on the same list when you refer to influence and impact.

    Maybe that’s just because Hauerwas is so visible within Methodism.

    1. doroteos2 Avatar
      doroteos2

      Like I say, it is not so much influence as primary source thinking vs. synthesizing the thoughts of others. Hauerwas is widely read and brings a wealth of perspectives, thinking, and ideas to bear on the church and contemporary culture. His value is immense. Looking back at Brueggemann’s corpus, he has done some amazing interpretive theology, especially on the Hebrew scriptures, that raise the relevancy of the OT on our modern faith. He’s done some really innovative things — I found his substantial Theology of the Old Testament a page-turner, one that I have read from cover-to-cover twice. (So, it may be nothing more than a matter of personal taste…)

  5. John Montgomery Avatar

    Interesting that your list leaves out those associated with so-called ‘process theology’ – I would certainly put John Cobb and Charles Hartshorne in the heavyweight list and at least Marjorie Suchocki and Schubert Ogden in the light heavyweight group.

    If memory serves me, Outler considered Wesley a “folk theologian.”

    1. doroteos2 Avatar
      doroteos2

      Ooh, Cobb & Suchocki — good ones, and two I should/would have put on my list. Thanks for adding to my list, such as it is.

  6. Wesley White Avatar

    Dan – My playing with the idea went to the WWE SmackDown vs. Raw 2010 video game – where mayhem is venerated. There is another way of coming at this through negative numbers instead of your positive approach. There are some folks considered (at least by themselves) as theologians who seem incapable of doing other than wreaking havoc. I’ll refrain from naming those I haughtily put in such a category, but evil does exist in theologians, as a category, as well as others.

    Wesley White

  7. Casey T Avatar

    Good thoughts. What I think is lacking is a definition of core/classic/orthodox Christianity to unify these thinkers. I would not rank Robert Funk on the same piece of paper as Augustine, Lewis, Wesley, or Hauerwas.

    If we’re talking about something like an apologetics dialogue, I’d include N.T Wright, David Bentley Hart or William Lane Craig.

    1. doroteos2 Avatar
      doroteos2

      I’m always mixed about Wright, but I am with you 100% on Craig as a heavyweight, and I would put Hart in the camp of truly gifted synthesizers. Thanks for bringing them all up. As to Funk, it may be a matter of taste, but I feel his early work called for serious engagement between biblical scholarship and modern theology, and his later work constantly challenged conventional wisdom and the status quo. Whether people agree or disagree, his theological proddings have generated more reflection/apologetics/dialogue (and debate) than most others I know of.

Leave a reply to Casey T Cancel reply