|
|
Books > Religion & Spirituality > Christianity > Christian theology > General
In Offering Hospitality: Questioning Christian Approaches to War,
Caron E. Gentry reflects on the predominant strands of American
political theology-Christian realism, pacifism, and the just war
tradition-and argues that Christian political theologies on war
remain, for the most part, inward-looking and resistant to
criticism from opposing viewpoints. In light of the new problems
that require choices about the use of force-genocide, terrorism,
and failed states, to name just a few-a rethinking of the
conventional arguments about just war and pacifism is timely and
important. Gentry's insightful perspective marries contemporary
feminist and critical thought to prevailing theories, such as
Christian realism represented in the work of Reinhold Niebuhr and
the pacifist tradition of Stanley Hauerwas. She draws out the
connection between hospitality in postmodern literature and
hospitality as derived from the Christian conception of agape, and
relates the literature on hospitality to the Christian ethics of
war. She contends that the practice of hospitality, incorporated
into the jus ad bellum criterion of last resort, would lead to a
"better peace." Gentry's critique of Christian realism, pacifism,
and the just war tradition through an engagement with feminism is
unique, and her treatment of failed states as a concrete security
issue is practical. By asking multiple audiences-theologians,
feminists, postmodern scholars, and International Relations
experts-to grant legitimacy and credibility to each other's
perspectives, she contributes to a reinvigorated dialogue.
Collecting together numerous examples of Augustine's musical
imagery in action, Laurence Wuidar reconstructs the linguistic
laboratory and the hermeneutics in which he worked. Sensitive and
poetical, this volume is a reminder that the metaphor of music can
give access not only to human interiority, but allow the human mind
to achieve proximity to the divine mind. Composed by one of
Europe's leading musicologists now engaging an English-speaking
audience for the first time, this book is a candid exploration of
Wuidar's expertise. Drawing on her long knowledge of music and the
occult, from antiquity to modernity, Wuidar particularly focuses
upon Augustine's working methods while refusing to be distracted by
questions of faith or morality. The result is an open and at times
frightening vista on the powers that be, and our complex need to
commune with them.
This book delves into the public character of public theology from
the sites of subalternity, the excluded Dalit (non) public in the
Indian public sphere. Raj Bharat Patta employs a decolonial
methodology and explores the topic in three parts: First, he
engages with 'theological contexts,' by mapping global and Indian
public theologies and critically analysing them. Next, he discusses
'theological companions,' and explains 'theological subalternity'
and 'subaltern public' as companions for a subaltern public
theology for India. Finally, Patta explains 'theological contours'
by discussing subaltern liturgy as a theological account of the
subaltern public and explores a subaltern public theology for
India.
The International Kierkegaard Commentary-For the first time in
English the world community of scholars systematically assembled
and presented the results of recent research in the vast literature
of Soren Kierkegaard. Based on the definitive English edition of
Kierkegaard's works by Princeton University Press, this series of
commentaries addresses all the published texts of the influential
Danish philosopher and theologian. This is volume 12 in a series of
commentaries based upon the definitive translations of
Kierkegaard's writings published by Princeton University Press,
1980ff.
|
|