Harmon abstract
As
the traditional Baptist aversion to tradition has its roots in the modern
milieu in which Baptists flourished, the reconstruction of Baptist life after
the collapse of modernity may require the formulation of a new hermeneutic of
tradition that is both postmodern and distinctively Baptist. After reevaluating the Baptist tendency to
reject tradition as a source of authority, I survey several non-Baptist
theologians and theological movements that have made constructive use of
tradition and consider the contributions they may make to a postmodern Baptist
hermeneutic of tradition. Finally, the
article proposes a hermeneutic of tradition that (1) has its locus in the
universal Church, the larger community under the Lordship of Christ to which
local churches and denominations belong; (2) focuses on the narrative that is
shared by the churches and rehearsed in their worship; and (3) requires
constructive dissent for the health of the tradition.