Chris Huebner

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Chris K. Huebner is an associate professor of theology and philosophy at Canadian Mennonite University,[1] as well as co-editor of the Polyglossia series in Herald-Press.

Huebner received a BTh from Canadian Mennonite Bible College, as well as a BA and MA in Philosophy from University of Manitoba. He holds a PhD in Theology and Ethics from Duke University. Prior to teaching at CMU, he was a part-time instructor in Philosophy at the University of Manitoba; a part-time instructor in Religion and Philosophy at Meredith College; and a part-time instructor in the University Writing Program at Duke University. Huebner's writing is primarily in the area of philosophical theology and can be located at the intersection of politics and epistemology, with a special interest in questions of peace and violence.

Works by Huebner

Books

  • A Precarious Peace (2006) ISBN 0-8361-9341-5
  • The Wisdom of the Cross: Essays in Honor of John Howard Yoder (2005) ISBN 1-59752-226-0 – co-editor
  • The New Yoder (2009) – co-editor

Selected articles and reviews

  • "The Work of Inheritance: Reflections on Receiving John Howard Yoder" in Power and Practices (2009) ISBN 0-8361-9447-0
  • "The End of Memory: Remembering Rightly in a Violent World" in Modern Theology 24/3 (2008)
  • "John Howard Yoder: Mennonite Patience, Evangelical Witness, Catholic Convictions" in Journal of Religion 87/3 (2007)
  • "The Nonviolent Atonement" in Modern Theology 20/3 (2004)
  • "Peace and War in the Nation-State and Beyond: A Response to George Weigel, 'Moral clarity in a Time of War'" in Mennonite Life 58/2 (2003)
  • "Bioethics and the Church: Technology, Martyrdom, and the Moral Significance of the Ordinary" in Vision 4/1 (2003)
  • "The Politics of the Cross: The Theology and Social Ethics of John Howard Yoder" in Modern Theology 18/2 (2002)
  • "Artists, Citizens, Philosophers: Seeking the Peace of the City: An Anabaptist Theology of Culture" in Mennonite Quarterly Review 76/1 (2002)
  • "History, Theory, and Anabaptism : A Conversation on Theology After John Howard Yoder", in The Wisdom of the Cross (1999) – with Stanley Hauerwas

Quotes

Anyone who reads Huebner's reflections and analysis of the habits that shape our lives—and in particular, how those habits threaten to erode the significance of memory for those who have lost the ability to remember—will be stricken by the gentle wisdom that informs his description of those whom he knows he must remember.

—Stanley Hauerwas

References

External links

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