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Schubert M. Ogden was born on 2 March, 1928 in Cincinnati, Ohio, US, is an American Protestant theologian (1928–2019). Discover Schubert M. Ogden's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 91 years old?

Popular As N/A
Occupation Professor
Age 91 years old
Zodiac Sign Pisces
Born 2 March, 1928
Birthday 2 March
Birthplace Cincinnati, Ohio, US
Date of death 6 June, 2019
Died Place Louisville, Colorado, US
Nationality United States

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Schubert M. Ogden Height, Weight & Measurements

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Who Is Schubert M. Ogden's Wife?

His wife is Joyce Ogden

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Wife Joyce Ogden
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Children 2

Schubert M. Ogden Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Schubert M. Ogden worth at the age of 91 years old? Schubert M. Ogden’s income source is mostly from being a successful Professor. He is from United States. We have estimated Schubert M. Ogden's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2024 Under Review
Net Worth in 2023 Pending
Salary in 2023 Under Review
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Source of Income Professor

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1928

Schubert Miles Ogden (March 2, 1928 – June 6, 2019) was an American Protestant theologian who proposed an interpretation of the Christian faith that he believes is both appropriate to the earliest apostolic witness found in the New Testament and also credible in the light of common human experience.

He has written eleven books and been awarded many honors including the John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship, a Fulbright research scholarship, as well as honorary degrees from Ohio Wesleyan University, the University of Chicago, and Southern Methodist University.

Ogden was born in 1928 in Cincinnati, Ohio, where he graduated from high school in 1946.

He then attended Ohio Wesleyan University where he met his future wife Joyce Ellen Schwettman.

He then studied philosophy for a year at Johns Hopkins before enrolling in the Divinity School of the University of Chicago where he earned both his BD and PhD. It was at the University of Chicago that he became concerned with the viewpoints of two major scholars who would influence his own theology: the philosophy of Charles Hartshorne, a metaphysician with whom Ogden studied, and the theology of Rudolf Bultmann, the German New Testament scholar whose project was "demythologizing" the New Testament; that is, interpreting the mythical elements of the New Testament in terms of existentialist philosophy.

Ogden's dissertation, published as Christ without Myth, was a critical but positive engagement with the thought of Rudolf Bultmann, an engagement about which one reviewer of Ogden has written: "Although it has been deepened and refined…Ogden’s basic understanding of the contemporary theological task has not changed since the expression given to it in his early appreciation of Bultmann’s contribution.".

1956

Ogden was invited to Perkins School of Theology at Southern Methodist University in 1956 and served on its faculty for thirteen years.

His two sons, Alan Scott and Andrew Merrick, were born in Dallas.

1962

It was in 1962-3 while in Marburg that Ogden's professional relationship to Bultmann developed into a personal one that was sustained by an extensive correspondence until Bultmann's death in 1976.

1969

In 1969 he left SMU to become University Professor of Theology at the Divinity School of the University of Chicago, only to return to Perkins in 1972 for an additional twenty-one years of teaching.

1976

He has been invited to many titled lectureships in universities in Europe and the United States, made President of the American Academy of Religion (1976-7), and elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1985).

1993

He retired in 1993 as University Distinguished Professor of Theology.

2019

Ogden died June 6, 2019, in Louisville, Colorado following a lengthy illness.

Ogden has written that from the beginning of his career he has understood himself to be a Christian theologian.

However, unlike most traditional Christian theologians, he has viewed the task of theology to be not an endorsement of traditional Christian doctrine but rather a critical reflection on the Christian witness.

This means to inquire, first, whether any subsequent Christian witness is appropriate to the earliest apostolic message about Christ, and, second, whether the Christian witness is credible in the light of common human experience.

The former task involves not only establishing what is the normative Christian witness that Jesus is the Christ but how that witness is to be interpreted, a task that involves both historical and interpretative issues concerning the New Testament.

The second task necessarily involves philosophy because the credibility of the Christian witness can only be established in purely secular terms.

The result of the large literature Ogden has produced that is dedicated to carrying out these two tasks has led one reviewer to write: "Probably no theologian since Schleiermacher has provided a more nuanced and cogent account of Christian theology’s constitution as a complex, yet integral field of critical reflection…."

Ogden's view of the task of theology rests on an analysis of our common human experience as having two inseparable dimensions: our empirical experience of ourselves and others, but also and more deeply, our existential experience, with its threefold certainty that we exist as subjects of our experience, that we exist together with others like ourselves on which we are mutually dependent, and that all of us exist as parts of the all-inclusive whole—the one circumambient reality on which we all depend absolutely and which, in its way, relatively, depends on all of us.

It is out of these certainties that the religions arise.

Religions are the cultural systems that provide the concepts and symbols through which a given human community explicitly asks and answers the existential question: what is the meaning of ultimate reality for us?

These religions basically presuppose that there is an authentic self-understanding or way persons view themselves in relation to the world that is normative, and that it is so because it is authorized by ultimate reality itself.

Ogden writes that Christian faith is an answer to this existential question concerning the meaning of ultimate reality for us.

What distinguishes Christian faith is that it believes that the most authentic self-understanding is decisively revealed through Jesus.

By "authentic self-understanding" is meant a transformation of the self in which we are inwardly liberated for others and ourselves by trust in and loyalty to the whole within which we exist.

With respect to the appropriateness of traditional Christian witness, Ogden's theology is distinguished from most forms of orthodox or liberal theology in holding that the primary authority for the Christian witness is the earliest apostolic witness discovered in the New Testament.

What historical-critical scholarship shows is that this earliest apostolic proclamation was not that Jesus was the Incarnation of God or that his empirical-historical life and teaching somehow symbolize the timeless truth of ethical monotheism, but rather that he himself, simply as a person or event, is "the decisive revelation of God and the primal authorizing source of all that is appropriately Christian."

. This so-called Jesus-kerygma thus proclaims Jesus as "God’s own call to decision . . . by representing [him] as the proclaimer of God’s imminent reign or rule."

What this means is that "whatever may or may not have been the case with the empirical-historical Jesus," the Jesus-kerygma proclaims that God's love "is decisively re-presented as the gift and demand that authorizes us to exist in obedient faith in God and in love both for God and for all whom God loves."

Ogden's insistence on saying that, for normative Christian witness, Jesus represents God's love entails rejecting all christological views in which the coming of Jesus is said to constitute the only possibility of achieving salvation.

Such views all assume that original sin made salvation impossible before Christ's coming.

But in Ogden's view, the event of Jesus Christ only decisively re-presents the possibility of salvation by manifesting what has been true all along: that God is nothing but boundless love, and that deciding for an authentic self-understanding, and therefore salvation, has always been a possibility.

This entails, in turn, that decision for such an authentic human existence could possibly occur otherwise than through the Christian religion and its special means of salvation.

With respect to the credibility of Christian witness, Ogden's theology is distinguished from most forms of orthodox or liberal theology since he asserts that whether the Christian faith is credible can be established only by means of philosophical inquiry.

He undertakes such inquiry by doing what he calls "transcendental metaphysics."

He argues that it is a fundamental existential presupposition of all human beings that life is ultimately worth living and that it is impossible to deny coherently what is thus necessarily implied by any self-understanding at all.

Pursuit of such transcendental metaphysical reflection, then, yields the notion of a universal individual upon which we are absolutely dependent and which is also relatively dependent upon us.

"God" is the name for this one and only universal individual, "whose field of interacting with others is utterly unrestricted. This implies . . . that nothing . . . either is or could be outside God’s love or merely alongside God, for . . . God’s very essence is love."

Both Ogden's critical analysis of the original Christian witness and his philosophical arguments concluding that the Christian faith is credible led him to reject most traditional formulations of Christian faith in God as well as of the usual positions taken against it.