For 46 years, McClendon taught theology at several institutions, including
Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary, the
University of San Francisco,
Stanford University, the
University of Notre Dame,
Fuller Theological Seminary,
Baylor University,
Temple University,
Goucher College,
Saint Mary's College of California, and
Church Divinity School of the Pacific. McClendon helped found what came to be known as the
narrative theology movement in the late 1960s. His system is post-foundationalist and primarily oriented toward constructing a theological-biblical hermeneutic for Christian communities to live more faithful lives in the world. His ethics is nonviolent and communal, and his doctrinal emphases include ecclesiology, eschatology, Christology, and resurrection. His other books include
Convictions: Defusing Religious Relativism, coauthored with James M. Smith, and
Biography as Theology. McClendon is frequently mentioned alongside
John Howard Yoder and
Stanley Hauerwas in seeking to reclaim the importance of character in theological ethics. McClendon took strong political stands in the 1960s that resulted in serious setbacks to his academic career. Some students and faculty at Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary, in Mill Valley, California, became vocal and active in support of the
civil rights movement in the U.S. South. As a result, the seminary in 1966 fired a junior faculty member involved in this effort, LeRoy Moore (1931-) (later a peace activist in Boulder, Colorado), and this led McClendon to resign from his tenured position at the seminary. McClendon then took up a teaching post at the
Jesuits'
University of San Francisco, becoming the first Protestant to teach theology at a
Catholic university. In 1968, McClendon organized the writing of an open letter by
Democratic faculty members to President
Lyndon B. Johnson urging withdrawal from the
War in Vietnam. McClendon believed that this action resulted in his contract not being renewed at USF, and he had temporary teaching positions for the next several years. McClendon regained stable academic employment when he took up a post at the Church Divinity School of the Pacific in 1971. The main appointment in his career was his tenure at the school, then a part of the
Graduate Theological Union, throughout the 1970s and 1980s. ==Philosophical background==