Andrew Picard is Director of Carey Graduate School and Lecturer in Public Theology at Carey Baptist College, New Zealand.
Immersed in Gunton’s trinitarian theology, Andrew Picard takes readers to the heart of Gunton's theology of culture. With finesse, Picard illuminates the enduring importance of Gunton's approach, charting a way forward that adeptly navigates the critiques that too often overshadow it. By so doing, this book is an indispensable resource for those seeking a faithful perspective on culture that, following Gunton, is theological all the way down. * Andrew Torrance, University of St Andrews, UK * Theologies of culture have never been more urgent than in our contemporary age of ‘culture wars’. Andrew Picard’s illuminating analysis of Colin Gunton’s trinitarian theology of culture, including Gunton’s neglected later works, will transform how theologians understand Gunton’s legacy. More widely, this innovative book will change how you conceive the relationship between trinitarian theology and human culture. * Joanna Leidenhag, University of Leeds, UK * The enduring value and profundity of Colin Gunton’s contribution to Christian theology in the late twentieth century has still to be appreciated in full. Gunton was a courageous dissenter from the tendency in both the academy and the church to bend to the dictates of secularism. He offers instead a theology deeply grounded in and informed by the action of the Triune God and an account of human culture as the terrain within which God is at work bringing to fulfilment God’s good purposes for the world. Andrew Picard brings these themes to light through his astute and profoundly important reading of Gunton’s theological writings. This book will be essential reading for anybody seeking a sure guide into the depths of Gunton’s theology. * Murray Rae, University of Otago, New Zealand * Andrew Picard’s work goes a long way toward setting the record straight in assessing the merits of Colin Gunton’s theological-cultural legacy. Rather than throw out the baby with the bathwater, he adeptly analyzes “third wave” criticisms while at the same time admirably demonstrates that proper attention to developments in Gunton’s later writings holds great promise for a less abstract and more material theology of culture. Going further, Picard’s constructive employment of Gunton’s mature writings in conversation with biblical and historical studies and cultural scientific resources extends the reach of King’s College London’s trinitarian theological architect for addressing pressing ethical issues and dismantling oppressive structures such as ableism in the contemporary church and society. * Paul Louis Metzger, William Jessup University, USA * Engagement with the thought of Colin Gunton is well underway, and Picard’s work here is an exemplary contribution to those studies. Over the course of six chapters, he has developed an insightful, informed, and critically engaged argument regarding Gunton’s thought that will be valuable to anyone exploring connections between Gunton’s theological perspective, social ethics, and theology of culture. * Eric Flett, Eastern University, USA *