Abstract
In this essay, we examine the emerging discipline of theology as a valuable window into the problematic of the return of and theology after religion. The first section discusses recent historical critiques of religion, focusing particularly on its emergence from a late nineteenth-century discourse that was also called comparative theology. This critique focuses attention on the unacknowledged normative commitments implicit in the category of religion as an object of scientific study. The second section presents the new theology as one of several constructive responses to the dilemma, with this critical difference: whereas the recognition of normative commitment remains a methodological problem for most scholars in religious studies, it belongs to the very nature of the theological project. Insofar as it encourages wider accountability and authentic vulnerability in its practice, we argue, the new theology represents both a way past the legacy of liberal universalism and a useful model for enquiry in theology and religious studies alike.
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