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Books > Religion & Spirituality > General
This book is collection of published and unpublished essays on the
philosophy of religion by Howard Wettstein, who is a widely
respected analytic philosopher. Over the past twenty years,
Wettstein has attempted to reconcile his faith with his philosophy,
and he brings his personal investment in this mission to the essays
collected here. Influenced by the work of George Santayana,
Wittgenstein, and A.J. Heschel, Wettstein grapples with central
issues in the philosophy of religion such as the relationship of
religious practice to religious belief, what is at stake in the
debate between atheists and theists, and the place of doctrine in
religion. His discussions draw from Jewish texts as well as
Christianity, Islam, and classical philosophy. The challenge
Wettstein undertakes throughout the volume is to maintain a
philosophical naturalism while pursuing an encounter with God and
traditional religion. In the Introduction to this volume, Wettstein
elucidates the uniting themes among the collected essays.
Barrett's book consists of a complete revision of the four
chapters, of the Didsbury Lectures, given at the British Isles
Nazarene College, Manchester. The chapter titles indicate the
content: From Jesus to the Church; Ministry; Sacraments; and The
Developing Community. Barrett properly points out that "the church
is at the same time central and peripheral." Likewise, the church
is provisional, temporary, penultimate-an interim solution for the
time between the resurrection/ ascension of Jesus and the heaven of
the church. He also correctly notes the possibility and danger of
an ecclesiological as well as christological Apollinarianism.
Consequently, he emphasizes the human nature of Christ and human
dimensions of the church.
The role of religion in the founding of America has long been a
hotly debated question. Some historians have regarded the faith of
a few famous founders, such as Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson,
James Madison, and Thomas Paine, as evidence that the founders were
deists who advocated the strict separation of church and state.
Popular Christian polemicists, on the other hand, have attempted to
show that virtually all of the founders were orthodox Christians in
favor of state support for religion. As the essays in this volume
demonstrate, a diverse array of religious traditions informed the
political culture of the American founding. Faith and the Founders
of the American Republic includes studies both of minority faiths,
such as Islam and Judaism, and of major traditions, such as
Calvinism. It also includes nuanced analysis of specific
founders-Quaker John Dickinson, prominent Baptists Isaac Backus and
John Leland, and Federalist Gouverneur Morris, among many
others-with attention to their personal histories, faiths,
constitutional philosophies, and views on the relationship between
religion and the state. This volume will be a crucial resource for
anyone interested in the place of faith in the founding of the
American constitutional republic, from political, religious,
historical, and legal perspectives.
Throughout the history of Indian religions, the ascetic figure is
most closely identified with power. Power is a by-product of the
ascetic path, and is displayed in the ability to fly, walk on water
or through dense objects, read minds, discern the former lives of
others, see into the future, harm others, or simply levitate one's
body. Using religio-philosophical discourses and narratives from
epic, puranic, and hagiographical literature, Indian Asceticism
focuses on the powers exhibited by ascetics of India from ancient
to modern time. The discourses and narratives show ascetics
performing violent acts and using language to curse and harm
opponents. They also give rise to questions about how power and
violence are related to the phenomenon of play. Olson discusses the
erotic, the demonic, the comic, and the miraculous forms of play
and their connections to power and violence. His focus is on
Hinduism, from early Indian religious history to more modern times,
but evidence is also presented from both Buddhism and Jainism,
which provides evidence that the subject matter of this book
pervades India's major indigenous religious traditions. The book
also includes a look at the extent to which contemporary findings
in cognitive science can add to our understanding about these
various powers; Olson argues that violence is built into the
practice of the ascetic. Indian Asceticism culminates with an
attempt to rethink the nature of power in a way that does justice
to the literary evidence from Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain sources.
One writer, Mary Shelley, inaugurated two of the three paradigms
through which human beings imagine, with panic or pleasure, the end
of their species. Complementing her visions of a world-encompassing
natural plague (The Last Man, 1826) and man-made technological
self-eradication (Frankenstein, 1818), the third - and oldest -
paradigm of how to depict humankind's demise is the religious
notion of Apocalypse, God's Day of Reckoning. Through in-depth
philosophical and theological contextualization of the German,
French and British literary settings of the apocalyptic tradition
around 1800, Sublime Conclusions chronicles the transition from
theism and deism to atheism and the 'Death of God' on which,
Weninger contends, Shelley's novels - and hence modern science
fiction in general - are premised. A tour de force of comparative
methodology, Weninger's transdisciplinary approach is as
wide-ranging as it is meticulous, interweaving the manifold
discourses of catastrophe in literary history, art and film
history, philosophy and theology, as well as the history of science
and science fiction, across more than two centuries of European
intellectual history from Voltaire's mid-eighteenth-century
response to the earthquake of Lisbon to Gunther Anders's presaging,
in the wake of Hiroshima, humankind's extinction through nuclear
Armageddon.
Karl Barth (1886-1968) was a prolific theologian of the 20th
century. Dr Gorringe places the theology in its social and
political context, from World War I through to the Cold War by
following Barth's intellectual development through the years that
saw the rise of national socialism and the development of
communism. Barth initiated a theological revolution in his two
"Commentaries on Romans", begun during World War I. His attempt to
deepen this during the turbulent years of the Weimar Republic made
him a focus of theological resistance to Hitler after the rise to
power of the Nazi party. Expelled from Germany, he continued to
defy fashionable opinion by refusing to condemn communism after
World War II. Drawing on a German debate largely ignored by
Anglo-Saxon theology, Dr Gorringe shows that Barth responds to the
events of his time not just in his occasional writings, but in his
magnum opus, the "Church Dogmatics". In conclusion Dr Gorringe asks
what this admittedly patriarchal author still has to contribute to
contemporary theology, and in particular human liberation. This
book is intended for undergraduate courses in theology and history
of doctrine.
Madhyamaka and Yogacara are the two principal schools of Mahayana
Buddhist philosophy. While Madhyamaka asserts the ultimate
emptiness and conventional reality of all phenomena, Yogacara is
idealistic. This collection of essays addresses the degree to which
these philosophical approaches are consistent or complementary.
Indian and Tibetan doxographies often take these two schools to be
philosophical rivals. They are grounded in distinct bodies of sutra
literature and adopt what appear to be very different positions
regarding the analysis of emptiness and the status of mind.
Madhyamaka-Yogacara polemics abound in Indian Buddhist literature,
and Tibetan doxographies regard them as distinct systems.
Nonetheless, scholars have tried to synthesize the two positions
for centuries, as in the case of Indian Buddhist philosopher
Santaraksita. This volume offers new essays by prominent experts on
both these traditions, who address the question of the degree to
which these philosophical approaches should be seen as rivals or as
allies. In answering the question of whether Madhyamaka and
Yogacara can be considered compatible, contributors engage with a
broad range of canonical literature, and relate the texts to
contemporary philosophical problems.
In Bringing the Sacred Down to Earth, Corinne Dempsey offers a
comparative study of Hindu and Christian, Indian and Euro/American
earthbound religious expressions. She argues that official
religious, political, and epistemological systems tend to deny
sacred access and expression to the general populace, and are
abstracted and disembodied in ways that make them irrelevant to if
not neglectful of earthly realities. Working at cross purposes with
these systems, attending to material needs, conferring sacred
access to a wider public, and imbuing land and bodies with sacred
meaning and power, are religious frameworks featuring folklore
figures, democratizing theologies, newly sanctified land, and
extraordinary human abilities. Some scholars will see Dempsey's
juxtapositions of Hindu and Christian religious dynamics, many of
which exist on opposite sides of the globe, as a leap into a
disciplinary minefield. Many have argued for decades that
comparison is an outmoded, politically troubled approach to the
human sciences. More recently opponents, represented by a growing
number of religion scholars, are ''writing back'' in comparison's
defense, asserting the merits of a readjusted, carefully
contextualized, new comparativism. But, says Dempsey, the
inestimable advantages of the comparative method described by
religion scholars and performed in this book are disciplinary as
well as ethical. As demonstrated in this stimulating book, the
process of comparison can shed light on angles and contours
otherwise obscured and perform the important work of bridging human
contingencies and perception across religious, cultural, and
disciplinary divides.
Echoes of Enlightenment: The Life and Legacy of Soenam Peldren
explores the issues of gender and sainthood raised by the discovery
of a previously unpublished "liberation story" of the
fourteenth-century Tibetan female Buddhist practitioner Soenam
Peldren. Born in 1328, Peldren spent most of her adult life living
and traveling as a nomad in eastern Tibet until her death in 1372.
Existing scholarship suggests that she was illiterate, lacking
religious education, and unconnected to established religious
institutions. That, and the fact that as a woman her claims of
religious authority would have been constantly questioned, makes
Soenam Peldren's overall success in legitimizing her claims of
divine identity all the more remarkable. Today the site of her
death is recognized as sacred by local residents. In this study,
Suzanne Bessenger draws on the newly discovered biography of the
saint, approaching it through several different lenses. Bessenger
seeks to understand how the written record of the saint's life is
shaped both by the specific hagiographical agendas of its multiple
authors and by the dictates of the genres of Tibetan religious
literature, including biography and poetry. She considers Peldren's
enduring historical legacy as a fascinating piece of Tibetan
history that reveals much about the social and textual machinations
of saint production. Finally, she identifies Peldren as one of the
earliest recorded instances of a historical Tibetan woman
successfully using the uniquely Tibetan hermeneutic of deity
emanation to achieve religious authority.
The Bible has always been a contested legacy. Form late antiquity
to the Refomation, debates about the Bible took place at the center
of manifold movements that defined Western civilization. In the
eigtheenth century, Europe's scriptural inheritance surfaced once
again at a critical moment. During the Enlightenment, scholars
guided by a new vision of a post-theological age did not simply
investigate the Bible, they remade it. In place of the familiar
scriptural Bibles that belonged to Christian and Jewish
communities, they created a new form: the academic Bible. In this
book, Michael Legaspi examines the creation of the academic Bible.
Beginning with the fragmentation of biblical interpretation in the
centuries after the Reformation, Legaspi shows how the weakening of
scriptural authority in the Western churches altered the role of
biblical interpretation. In contexts shaped by skepticism and
religious strife, interpreters increasingly operated on the Bible
as a text to be managed by critical tools. These developments
prepared the way for scholars to formalize an approach to biblical
study oriented toward the statist vision of the new universities
and their sponsors. Focusing on a renowned German scholar of the
period, Johann David Michaelis (1717-1791), Legaspi explores the
ways that critics reconceived authority of the Bible by creating an
institutional framework for biblical interpretation designed to
parallel-and replace-scriptural reading. This book offers a new
account of the origins of biblical studies, illuminating the
relation of the Bible to churchly readers, theological
interpreters, academic critics, and people in between. It explains
why, in an age of religious resurgence, modern biblical criticism
may no longer be in a position to serve as the Bible's disciplinary
gatekeeper.
Stories of Gods and Monsters  Scandinavians of the Viking
era explored the mysteries of life through their sagas. Folklorist
Helene Adeline Guerber brings to life the gods and goddesses,
giants and dwarves, and warriors and monsters of these stories in
her classic Tales of Norse Mythology. Â Ranging from the
comic to the tragic, these legends are packed with such legendary
figures as the beautiful and fierce Valkyries, the wily trickster
Loki, and the mighty god Thor. They tell of passion, love,
friendship, pride, courage, strength, loyalty, and betrayal.
 Packed with colorful illustrations, Tales of Norse
Mythology is necessary reading for anybody who is interested in
learning more about Nordic legends, or who simply likes a great
story. Â
The astonishing growth of Christianity in the global South over the
course of the twentieth century has sparked an equally rapid growth
in studies of ''World Christianity, '' which have dismantled the
notion that Christianity is a Western religion. What, then, are we
to make of the waves of Western missionaries who have, for
centuries, been evangelizing in the global South? Were they merely,
as many have argued, agents of imperialism out to impose Western
values? In An Unpredictable Gospel, Jay Case examines the efforts
of American evangelical missionaries in light of this new
scholarship. He argues that if they were agents of imperialism,
they were poor ones. Western missionaries had a dismal record of
converting non-Westerners to Christianity. The ministries that were
most successful were those that empowered the local population and
adapted to local cultures. In fact, influence often flowed the
other way, with missionaries serving as conduits for ideas that
shaped American evangelicalism. Case traces these currents and
sheds new light on the relationship between Western and non-Western
Christianities.
In the last decades of the 17th century, the feast of Christmas in
Lutheran Germany underwent a major transformation when theologians
and local governments waged an early modern "war on Christmas,"
discouraging riotous pageants and carnivalesque rituals in favor of
more personal and internalized expressions of piety. Christmas
rituals, such as the "Heilig Christ" plays and the rocking of the
child (Kindelwiegen) were abolished, and Christian devotion focused
increasingly on the metaphor of a birth of Christ in the human
heart. John Sebastian Bach's Christmas Oratorio, composed in 1734,
both reflects this new piety and conveys the composer's experience
living through this tumult during his own childhood and early
career. Markus Rathey's book is the first thorough study of this
popular masterpiece in English. While giving a comprehensive
overview of the Christmas Oratorio as a whole, the book focuses on
two themes in particular: the cultural and theological
understanding of Christmas in Bach's time and the compositional
process that led Bach from the earliest concepts to the completed
piece. The cultural and religious context of the oratorio provides
the backdrop for Rathey's detailed analysis of the composition, in
which he explores Bach's compositional practices, for example, his
reuse and parodies of movements that had originally been composed
for secular cantatas. The book analyzes Bach's original score and
sheds new light on the way Bach wrote the piece, how he shaped
musical themes, and how he revised his initial ideas into the final
composition.
This is a beautifully crafted and clearly written introduction to
Christianity over its 2000 year history, concentrating on the
interaction between the sacred and the secular. This book is a
practical response to the experience of teaching in a variety of
different settings from university undergraduates, through WEA, to
parish groups. This book will thus adopt an approach radically
different to that of many general Church histories in terms of
length, structure and presentation. The broad underlying theme of
the book will be the interaction between Christianity and the
secular world, exploring how one has shaped and been shaped by the
other, reflecting the title of the book. In order to achieve this,
the book will not attempt to cover the whole of Christian history
(this has been done frequently by others), but rather it will focus
on a number of specific themes and chronological periods. The four
themes will be Belief, Practice, Organisation and Propagation.
There will be four chronological divisions, chosen as pivotal in
the development of Christianity, and reflecting the conventional
divisions of history into ancient, medieval, early and later
modern. This will enable the book to be used as either a general
introduction to Christian history or as a starting point for
further investigation of one or more periods. The periods are: The
Imperial Church (300-500) The Medieval Church (1050-1250), The
Reformation Church (1450-1650) The Modern Church (1800-2000). There
will be included maps, timelines, quotations from primary source
material, a glossary and a further reading section.
This volume comprises papers presented at a conference marking the
50th anniversary of Joachim Wach's death, and the centennial of
Mircea Eliade's birth. Its purpose is to reconsider both the
problematic, separate legacies of these two major twentieth-century
historians of religions, and the bearing of these two legacies upon
each other. Shortly after Wach's death in 1955, Eliade succeeded
him as the premiere historian of religions at the University of
Chicago. As a result, the two have been associated with each other
in many people's minds as the successive leaders of the so-called
"Chicago School" in the history of religions. In fact, as this
volume makes clear, there never was a monolithic Chicago School.
Although Wach reportedly referred to Eliade as the most astute
historian of religions of the day; the two never met, and their
approaches to the study of religions differed significantly.
Several dominant issues run through the essays collected here: the
relationship between the two men's writings and their lives, and in
Eliade's case, the relationship between his political commitments
and his writings in fiction, history of religions, and
autobiography. Both men's contributions to the field continue to
provoke controversy and debate, and this volume sheds new light on
these controversies and what they reveal about these two scholars'
legacies.
For more than thirty years, Jonathan Z. Smith has been perhaps the
most important voice of critical reflection within the academic
study of religion. His essays are cited constantly, his books used
in undergraduate and graduate classes. Smith has also produced a
significant corpus of essays and lectures on teaching and on the
essential role of academic scholarship on religion in matters of
education and public policy. Many of these articles appeared in
education journals, which unfortunately most academic scholars do
not read; others are collected in specialist volumes of conference
proceedings on Judaic Studies, for example. Many were originally
delivered as keynote speeches to the AAR and other major scholarly
organizations, and although scholars reminisce about hearing Smith
deliver them, the works themselves are not readily available.
Education is not a side issue for Smith, and his essays continually
shed light on fundamental questions. What differentiates college
from high school? What are the proper functions of an introductory
course? What functions should a department serve in undergraduate
and graduate education? How should a major or concentration be
conceived-if at all? What roles should the academic guilds play in
public discourse on education and on religion? Most importantly,
what does it mean to say that one is both a scholar and a teacher,
and what responsibilities does this entail? On Teaching Religion
collects the best of these essays and lectures into one volume,
along with a new essay by Smith.
Who was Paul of Tarsus? Radical visionary of a new age?
Gender-liberating progressive? Great defender of orthodoxy? In
Remembering Paul, Benjamin L. White offers a critique of early
Christian claims about the real Paul in the second century C.E.a
period in which apostolic memory was highly contestedand sets these
ancient contests alongside their modern counterpart: attempts to
rescue the historical Paul from his canonical entrapments.
Examining numerous early Christian sources, White argues that
Christians of the second century had no access to the real Paul.
Rather, they possessed mediations of Paul as a personaidealized
images transmitted in the context of communal memories of the
Apostle. Through the selection, combination, and interpretation of
pieces of a diverse earlier layer of the Pauline tradition,
Christians defended images of the Apostle that were important for
forming collective identity. As products of memory, images of Paul
exhibit unique mixtures of continuity with and change from the
past. Ancient discourses on the real Paul, thus, like their modern
counterparts, are problematic. Through a host of exclusionary
practices, the real Paul, whose authoritative persona carries
authority as the first window into Christianity, was and continues
to be invoked as a wedge to gain traction for the conservation of
ideology.
The Cambridge History of Religion in the Classical World provides a
comprehensive and in-depth analysis of the religions of the ancient
Near East and Mediterranean world in the third millennium BCE to
the fourth century BCE.
Holy War in Judaism is the first book to consider how the concept
of ''holy war'' disappeared from Jewish thought for almost 2000
years, only to reemerge with renewed vigor in modern times. Holy
war, sanctioned or even commanded by God, is a common and recurring
theme in the Hebrew Bible, but Rabbinic Judaism largely avoided
discussion of holy war in the Talmud and related literatures for
the simple reason that it became extremely dangerous and
self-destructive. The revival of the holy war idea occurred with
the rise of Zionism, and as the need for organized Jewish
engagement in military actions developed, Orthodox Jews faced a
dilemma. There was great need for all to engage in combat for the
survival of the infant state of Israel, but the Talmudic rabbis had
virtually eliminated divine authorization for Jews to fight in
Jewish armies. The first stage of the revival was sanction for Jews
to fight in defense. The next stage emerged with the establishment
of the state and allowed Orthodox Jews to enlist even when the
community was not engaged in a war of survival. Once the notion of
divinely sanctioned warring was revived, it became available to
Jews who considered that the historical context justified more
aggressive forms of warring. Among some Jews, divinely authorized
war became associated not only with defense but also with a renewed
kibbush or conquest, a term that became central to the discourse
regarding war and peace and the lands conquered by the state of
Israel in 1967. By the early 1980's, the rhetoric of holy war had
entered the general political discourse of modern Israel. In this
book Reuven Firestone identifies, analyzes, and explains the
historical, conceptual, and intellectual processes that revived
holy war ideas in modern Judaism. The book serves as a case study
of the way in which one ancient religious concept, once deemed
irrelevant or even dangerous, was successfully revived in order to
fill a pressing contemporary need. It also helps to clarify the
current political and religious situation in relation to war and
peace in Israel and the Middle East.
This is an introduction the thought of Robert Holcot, a great and
influential but often underappreciated medieval thinker. Holcot was
a Dominican friar who flourished in the 1330's and produced a
diverse body of work including scholastic treatises, biblical
commentaries, and sermons. By viewing the whole of Holcot's corpus,
this book provides a comprehensive account of his thought.
Challenging established characterizations of him as a skeptic or
radical, this book shows Holcot to be primarily concerned with
affirming and supporting the faith of the pious believer. At times,
this manifests itself as a cautious attitude toward absolutists'
claims about the power of natural reason. At other times, Holcot
reaffirms, in Anselmian fashion, the importance of rational effort
in the attempt to understand and live out one's faith. Over the
course of this introduction the authors unpack Holcot's views on
faith and heresy, the divine nature and divine foreknowledge, the
sacraments, Christ, and political philosophy. Likewise, they
examine Holcot's approach to several important medieval literary
genres, including the development of his unique "picture method,"
biblical commentaries, and sermons. In so doing, John Slotemaker
and Jeffrey Witt restore Holcot to his rightful place as one of the
most important thinkers of his time.
Constructive interreligious dialogue is only a recent phenomenon.
Until the nineteenth century, most dialogue among believers was
carried on as a debate aimed either to disprove the claims of the
other, or to convert the other to one's own tradition. At the end
of the nineteenth century, Protestant Christian missionaries of
different denominations had created such a cacophony amongst
themselves in the mission fields that they decided that it would be
best if they could begin to overcome their own differences instead
of confusing and even scandalizing the people whom they were trying
to convert. By the middle of the twentieth century, the horrors of
the Holocaust compelled Christians, especially mainline Protestants
and Catholics, to enter into a serious dialogue with Jews, one of
the consequences of which was the removal of claims by Christians
to have replaced Judaism, and revising text books that communicated
that message to Christian believers.
Now, at the beginning of the twenty-first century, many branches of
Christianity, not least the Catholic Church, are engaged in a
world-wide constructive dialogue with Muslims, made all the more
necessary by the terrorist attacks of September 11. In these new
conversations, Muslim religious leaders took an important
initiative when they sent their document, ''A Common Word Between
Us, '' to all Christians in the West. It is an extraordinary
document, for it makes a theological argument (various Christians
in the West, including officials at the Vatican, have claimed that
a ''theological conversation'' with Muslims is not possible) based
on texts drawn from the Hebrew Bible, the New Testament and the
Qur'an, that Jewish, Christian, and Muslim believers share the
God-given obligation to love God and each other in peace and
justice.
The Institute for Advanced Catholic Studies brought together an
international group of sixteen Jewish, Catholic, and Muslim
scholars to carry on an important theological exploration of the
theme of ''learned ignorance.''
Between 1920 and 1994, the Catholic Church was Rwanda's most
dominant social and religious institution. In recent years, the
church has been critiqued for its perceived complicity in the
ethnic discourse and political corruption that culminated with the
1994 genocide. In analyzing the contested legacy of Catholicism in
Rwanda, Rwanda Before the Genocide focuses on a critical decade,
from 1952 to 1962, when Hutu and Tutsi identities became
politicized, essentialized, and associated with political violence.
This study-the first English-language church history on Rwanda in
over 30 years-examines the reactions of Catholic leaders such as
the Swiss White Father Andre Perraudin and Aloys Bigirumwami,
Rwanda's first indigenous bishop. It evaluates Catholic leaders'
controversial responses to ethnic violence during the revolutionary
changes of 1959-62 and after Rwanda's ethnic massacres in 1963-64,
1973, and the early 1990s. In seeking to provide deeper insight
into the many-threaded roots of the Rwandan genocide, Rwanda Before
the Genocide offers constructive lessons for Christian ecclesiology
and social ethics in Africa and beyond.
Enchantment and Creed in the Hymns of Ambrose of Milan offers the
first critical overview of the hymns of Ambrose of Milan in the
context of fourth-century doctrinal song and Ambrose's own
catechetical preaching. Brian P. Dunkle, SJ, argues that these
settings inform the interpretation of Ambrose's hymnodic project.
The hymns employ sophisticated poetic techniques to foster a
pro-Nicene sensitivity in the bishop's embattled congregation.
After a summary presentation of early Christian hymnody, with
special attention to Ambrose's Latin predecessors, Dunkle describes
the mystagogical function of fourth-century songs. He examines
Ambrose's sermons, especially his catechetical and mystagogical
works, for preached parallels to this hymnodic effort. Close
reading of Ambrose's hymnodic corpus constitutes the bulk of the
study. Dunkle corroborates his findings through a treatment of
early Ambrosian imitations, especially the poetry of Prudentius.
These early readers amplify the hymnodic features that Dunkle
identifies as "enchanting," that is, enlightening the "eyes of
faith."
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