Does women's experience matter for theological inquiry? Elizabeth Johnson's premise is that it
does and that the failure of traditional Trinitarian doctrine to account for women's
relationality results in a too radical distinction between God and the world. Drawing on
feminist ethics and God-talk transcendental experience and panentheistic Trinitarian theology
she constructs an alternative relational ontology and Trinitarian female symbol. Is her
integration of these multiple systems viable? More importantly can divine and human freedom
distinction and personhood be upheld within Johnson's framework? Knowing God by Name is a
critical assessment and evaluation of this approach bringing Johnson into conversation with
Catholic and feminist colleagues and with Karl Barth whose Trinitarian theology of experience
maintains the divine-creaturely distinction she challenges. It asks whether her combination of
Rahnerian anthropology panentheistic relational ontology and feminist God-talk is internally
consistent and methodologically plausible. Knowing God by Name thoughtfully examines Johnson's
claim to speak within the contours of historical Trinitarian Christianity and her contribution
to the life and language of the Church today.