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Books > Religion & Spirituality
Significant advances in science bring new understandings of the
human as a unity of mind, body and world and calls into question
the deep-seated dualistic presuppositions of modern theology.
Oliver Davies argues that the changing framework allows a return to
the defining question of the Easter Church: 'Where is Jesus
Christ?'. This is a question which can bring about a fundamental
re-orientation of theology, since it gives space for the
theological reception of the disruptive presence of the living
Christ as the present material as well as formal object of theology
in the world. At the centre of this study therefore is a new
theology of the doctrine of the exaltation of Christ, based upon St
Paul's encounter with the exalted or commissioning Christ on the
road to Damascus. This places calling and commissioning at the
centre of systematic theology. It provides the ground for a new
understanding of theology as transcending the Academy-Church
division as well as the divide between systematic and practical
theology. It points also to a new critical theological method of
engagement and collaboration. This book begins to explore new forms
of world-centred theological rationality in the contexts not only
of scripture, doctrine, anthropology, ecclesiology and faith, but
also of Christian politics and philosophy. It is a work of
contemporary and global Christological promise in Fundamental
Theology, and is addressed to all those who are concerned, from
whichever denomination, with the continuing vitality of
Christianity in a changing world.
Vincent de Paul, the Lazarist Mission, and French Catholic Reform
offers a major re-assessment of the thought and activities of the
most famous figure of the seventeenth-century French Catholic
Reformation, Vincent de Paul. Confronting traditional explanations
for de Paul's prominence in the devot reform movement that emerged
in the wake of the Wars of Religion, the volume explores how he
turned a personal vocational desire to evangelize the rural poor of
France into a congregation of secular missionaries, known as the
Congregation of the Mission or the Lazarists, with three
inter-related strands of pastoral responsibility: the delivery of
missions, the formation and training of clergy, and the promotion
of confraternal welfare. Alison Forrestal further demonstrates that
the structure, ethos, and works that de Paul devised for the
Congregation placed it at the heart of a significant enterprise of
reform that involved a broad set of associates in efforts to
transform the character of devotional belief and practice within
the church. The central questions of the volume therefore concern
de Paul's efforts to create, characterize, and articulate a
distinctive and influential vision for missionary life and work,
both for himself and for the Lazarist Congregation, and Forrestal
argues that his prominence and achievements depended on his
remarkable ability to exploit the potential for association and
collaboration within the devot environment of seventeenth-century
France in enterprising and systematic ways. This is the first study
to assess de Paul's activities against the wider backdrop of
religious reform and Bourbon rule, and to reconstruct the
combination of ideas, practices, resources, and relationships that
determined his ability to pursue his ambitions. A work of forensic
detail and complex narrative, Vincent de Paul, the Lazarist
Mission, and French Catholic Reform is the product of years of
research in ecclesiastical and state archives. It offers a wholly
fresh perspective on the challenges and opportunities entailed in
the promotion of religious reform and renewal in
seventeenth-century France.
This book is designed to introduce readers to the world of
Christian scholarship by way of primary literary sources. It
contains the most notable and instructive primary sources from the
entire sweep of Christian history, along with accessible
introductions, line-by-line annotations, study questions, a
glossary, and suggestions for further reading.
Buddhism is in many ways a visual tradition, with its well-known
practices of visualization, its visual arts, its epistemological
writings that discuss the act of seeing, and its literature filled
with images and metaphors of light. Some Buddhist traditions are
also visionary, advocating practices by which meditators seek
visions that arise before their eyes. Naked Seeing investigates
such practices in the context of two major esoteric traditions, the
Wheel of Time (Kalacakra) and the Great Perfection (Dzogchen). Both
of these experimented with sensory deprivation, and developed yogas
involving long periods of dwelling in dark rooms or gazing at the
open sky. These produced unusual experiences of seeing, which were
used to pursue some of the classic Buddhist questions about
appearances, emptiness, and the nature of reality. Along the way,
these practices gave rise to provocative ideas and suggested that,
rather than being apprehended through internal insight, religious
truths might also be seen in the exterior world-realized through
the gateway of the eyes. Christopher Hatchell presents the
intellectual and literary histories of these practices, and also
explores the meditative techniques and physiology that underlie
their distinctive visionary experiences.
The book also offers for the first time complete English
translations of three major Tibetan texts on visionary practice: a
Kalacakra treatise by Yumo Mikyo Dorje, The Lamp Illuminating
Emptiness, a Nyingma Great Perfection work called The Tantra of the
Blazing Lamps, and a Bon Great Perfection work called Advice on the
Six Lamps, along with a detailed commentary on this by Drugom
Gyalwa Yungdrung."
In The Republic, Plato suggests that the enlightened person will
find himself disoriented on his return to the realm of the shadows.
So at the very beginning of the Western philosophical tradition,
there is a clear affirmation of the idea that following
enlightenment, the sensory world can be differently experienced. In
this book, Mark Wynn takes up this idea, but argues that
'enlightenment' or spiritual maturity may result in, and may partly
consist in, not so much a state of confusion or bewilderment in our
experience of sensory things, but in a renewal of the realm of the
senses. On this view, the 'shadows', as they feature in the seer's
experience, can bear the imprint of religious thoughts and
attitudes, and it is therefore possible to be occupied with
religious thoughts even as we engage with the realm of sensory
things. And if that is so, then one standard objection to
Christian, and in general broadly Platonic, conceptions of the
spiritual life will have been removed: attending to the realm of
religious truth need not after all imply any neglect of the world
of sensory forms; and it may even be that it is in our encounter
with the realm of sensory forms that certain religious insights are
presented to us most vividly.
The Language of Disenchantment explores how Protestant ideas about
language influenced British colonial attitudes toward Hinduism and
proposals for the reform of that tradition. Protestant literalism,
mediated by a new textual economy of the printed book, inspired
colonial critiques of Indian mythological, ritual, linguistic, and
legal traditions. Central to these developments was the
transposition of the Christian opposition between monotheism and
polytheism or idolatry into the domain of language. Polemics
against verbal idolatry - including the elevation of a scriptural
canon over heathenish custom, the attack on the personifications of
mythological language, and the critique of "vain repetitions" in
prayers and magic spells - previously applied to Catholic and
sectarian practices in Britain were now applied by colonialists to
Indian linguistic practices. As a remedy for these diseases of
language, the British attempted to standardize and codify Hindu
traditions as a step toward both Anglicization and
Christianization. The colonial understanding of a perfect language
as the fulfillment of the monotheistic ideal echoed earlier
Christian myths according to which the Gospel had replaced the
obscure discourses of pagan oracles and Jewish ritual. By
recovering the historical roots of the British re-ordering of South
Asian discourses in Protestantism, Yelle challenges representations
of colonialism, and of the modernity that it ushered in, as simply
rational or secular.
Since the early 1980s, there has been renewed scholarly interest in
the concept of Christian Humanism. A number of official Catholic
documents have stressed the importance of 'Christian humanism', as
a vehicle of Christian social teaching and, indeed, as a Christian
philosophy of culture. Fundamentally, humanism aims to explore what
it means to be human and what the grounds are for human
flourishing. Featuring contributions from internationally renowned
Christian authors from a variety of disciplines in the humanities,
Re-Envisioning Christian Humanism recovers a Christian humanist
ethos for our time. The volume offers a chronological overview
(from patristic humanism to the Reformation and beyond) and
individual examples (Jewell, Calvin) of past Christian humanisms.
The chapters are connected through the theme of Christian paideia
as the foundation for liberal arts education.
Kelly Besecke offers an examination of reflexive spirituality, a
spirituality that draws equally on religions traditions and
traditions of reason in the pursuit of transcendent meaning. People
who practice reflexive spirituality prefer metaphor to literalism,
spiritual experience to doctrinal belief, religious pluralism to
religious exclusivism or inclusivism, and ongoing inquiry to
''final answers.'' Reflexive spirituality is aligned with liberal
theologies in a variety of religious traditions and among the
spiritual-but-not-religious. You Can't Put God in a Box draws on
original qualitative data to describe how people practiced
reflexive spirituality in an urban United Methodist church, an
interfaith adult education center, and a variety of secular
settings. The theoretical argument focuses on two kinds of
rationality that are both part of the Enlightenment legacy.
Technological rationality focuses our attention on finding the most
efficient means to a particular end. Reflexive spiritualists reject
forms of religiosity and secularity that rely on the biases of
technological rationality-they see these as just so many versions
of ''fundamentalism'' that are standing in the way of compelling
spiritual meaning. Intellectual rationality, on the other hand,
offers tools for analysis, interpretation, and synthesis of
religious ideas. Reflexive spiritualists embrace intellectual
rationality as a way of making religious traditions more meaningful
for modern ears. Besecke provides a window into the progressive
theological thinking of educated spiritual seekers and religious
liberals. Grounded in participant observation, her book uses
concrete examples of reflexive spirituality in practice to speak to
the classical sociological problem of modern meaninglessness.
Lethal Spots, Vital Secrets provides an ethnographic study of
varmakkalai, or "the art of the vital spots," a South Indian
esoteric tradition that combines medical practice and martial arts.
Although siddha medicine is officially part of the Indian
Government's medically pluralistic health-care system, very little
of a reliable nature has been written about it. Drawing on a
diverse array of materials, including Tamil manuscripts, interviews
with practitioners, and his own personal experience as an
apprentice, Sieler traces the practices of varmakkalai both in
different religious traditions-such as Yoga and Ayurveda-and within
various combat practices. His argument is based on in-depth
ethnographic research in the southernmost region of India, where
hereditary medico-martial practitioners learn their occupation from
relatives or skilled gurus through an esoteric, spiritual education
system. Rituals of secrecy and apprenticeship in varmakkalai are
among the important focal points of Sieler's study. Practitioners
protect their esoteric knowledge, but they also engage in a kind of
"lure and withdrawal"--a performance of secrecy--because secrecy
functions as what might be called "symbolic capital." Sieler argues
that varmakkalai is, above all, a matter of texts in practice;
knowledge transmission between teacher and student conveys tacit,
non-verbal knowledge, and constitutes a "moral economy." It is not
merely plain facts that are communicated, but also moral
obligations, ethical conduct and tacit, bodily knowledge. Lethal
Spots, Vital Secrets will be of interest to students of religion,
medical anthropologists, historians of medicine, indologists, and
martial arts and performance studies.
This volume continues the work of a recent collection published in
2012 by Oxford University Press, Dogen: Textual and Historical
Studies. It features some of the same outstanding authors as well
as some new experts who explore diverse aspects of the life and
teachings of Zen master Dogen (1200-1253), the founder of the Soto
Zen sect (or Sotoshu) in early Kamakura-era Japan. The contributors
examine the ritual and institutional history of the Soto school,
including the role of the Eiheji monastery established by Dogen as
well as various kinds of rites and precepts performed there and at
other temples. Dogen and Soto Zen builds upon and further refines a
continuing wave of enthusiastic popular interest and scholarly
developments in Western appropriations of Zen. In the last few
decades, research in English and European languages on Dogen and
Soto Zen has grown, aided by an increasing awareness on both sides
of the Pacific of the important influence of the religious movement
and its founder. The school has flourished throughout the medieval
and early modern periods of Japanese history, and it is still
spreading and reshaping itself in the current age of globalization.
Jewish Theology Unbound challenges the widespread misinterpretation
of Judaism as a religion of law as opposed to theology. James A.
Diamond provides close readings of the Bible, classical rabbinic
texts, Jewish philosophers, and mystics from the ancient, medieval,
and modern period, which communicate a profound Jewish
philosophical theology on human nature, God, and the relationship
between the two. The study begins with an examination of
questioning in the Hebrew Bible, demonstrating that what the Bible
encourages is independent philosophical inquiry into how to situate
oneself in the world ethically, spiritually, and teleologically. It
explores such themes as the nature of God through the various names
by which God is known in the Jewish intellectual tradition, love of
others and of God, death, martyrdom, freedom, angels, the
philosophical quest, the Holocaust, and the state of Israel, all in
light of the Hebrew Bible and the way it is filtered through the
rabbinic, philosophical, and mystical traditions.
Following on from his first book, 'Internal Revolution', 'A
Champion's Resolve' offers grace and inspiration to not only be
victorious, but to help others in their own walk with God. It's a
very transparent account of a modern man's pursuit and passion to
live a pure life, set apart for God. Containing personal testimony
backed up by solid Bible teaching it serves to ensure the reader
never gives up their own struggle. With the courage of a cage
fighter Rob Joy attacks the spiritual forces that have the
potential to rob the Christian of their effectiveness and
faithfulness.
Alexander Murray has long had an intellectual interest in the
history of religion - struggling between his inbuilt anti-clericism
and his pronounced monastic leanings. The five essays in Conscience
and Authority in the Medieval Church take on this dialectic,
addressing the difficult relationship between private conscience
and public authority in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. In
any organization, political, military, commercial, or religious,
the relationship of conscience and authority is always potentially
fraught, and can create dilemmas both for those in authority and
those without. This volume records how our European predecessors
approached and dealt with the same dilemmas as we face in the
modern world.
Religion and Community in the New Urban America examines the
interrelated transformations of cities and urban congregations over
the past several decades. The authors ask how the new metropolis
affects local religious communities, and what the role of those
local religious communities is in creating the new metropolis.
Through an in-depth study of fifteen Chicago congregations-Catholic
parishes, Protestant churches, Jewish synagogues, Muslim mosques,
and a Hindu temple, city and suburban, neighborhood-based and
commuter-this book describes the lives of their members and
measures the influences of those congregations on urban
environments. Paul D. Numrich and Elfriede Wedam challenge the view
held by many urban studies scholars that religion plays a small
role-if any-in shaping postindustrial cities and that religious
communities merely adapt to urban structures in a passive fashion.
Taking into account the spatial distribution of constituents,
internal traits, and external actions, each congregation's urban
impact is plotted on a continuum of weak, to moderate, to strong,
thus providing a nuanced understanding of the significance of
religion in the contemporary urban context. Providing a thoughtful
analysis that includes several original maps illustrating such
things as membership distribution for each congregation, the
authors offer an insightful look into urban community life today,
from congregations to the social-geographic places in which they
are embedded.
One of the twentieth-century's masterpieces of Catholic theology.
Ellen Muehlberger explores the diverse and inventive ideas
Christians held about angels in late antiquity. During the fourth
and fifth centuries, Christians began experimenting with new modes
of piety, adapting longstanding forms of public authority to
Christian leadership and advancing novel ways of cultivating body
and mind to further the progress of individual Christians.
Muehlberger argues that in practicing these new modes of piety,
Christians developed new ways of thinking about angels. The book
begins with a detailed examination of the two most popular
discourses about angels that developed in late antiquity. In the
first, developed by Christians cultivating certain kinds of ascetic
practices, angels were one type of being among many in a shifting
universe, and their primary purpose was to guard and to guide
Christians. In the other, articulated by urban Christian leaders in
contest with one another, angels were morally stable characters
described in the emerging canon of Scripture, available to enable
readers to render Scripture coherent with emerging theological
positions. Muehlberger goes on to show how these two discourses did
not remain isolated in separate spheres of cultivation and
contestation, but influenced one another and the wider Christian
culture. She offers in-depth analysis of popular biographies
written in late antiquity, of the community standards of emerging
monastic communities, and of the training programs developed to
prepare Christians to participate in ritual, demonstrating that new
ideas about angels shaped and directed the formation of the
definitive institutions of late antiquity. Angels in Late Ancient
Christianity is a meticulous and thorough study of early Christian
ideas about angels, but it also offers a different perspective on
late ancient Christian history, arguing that angels were central
rather than peripheral to the emergence of Christian institutions
and Christian culture in late antiquity.
With the ESV Economy Bible it’s easier than ever to impact lives
through the distribution of the Bible. The most affordable Bible on the
market, the Economy Bible features the clear English Standard Version
text, making it compelling and readable to those receiving a Bible for
the first time.
This paperback edition of the full ESV Bible is ideal for bulk
distribution. The Economy Bible features not only the full text of the
ESV Bible but also an article entitled, "Why Read the Bible," a 40-day
reading plan, and an explanation of the plan of salvation. Highly
affordable and designed especially for outreach, the Economy Bible is a
great resource for reaching the world with God’s Word.
• 7-point Lexicon type
• Black letter text
• Article entitled "Why Read the Bible"
• 40-day Bible reading plan
• Explanation of the plan of salvation
• Introductions to the Old and New Testaments
• Packaging: none
The New Century Youth Bible, first published in 1993, has
consistently been among the top three selling Bibles in the UK.
This revised edition brings the Youth Bible right up-to-date for
the twenty-first century. Whilst retaining the original Anglicized
text, this revised edition has over 25 of its Life Files replaced
or updated. There are also new categories on subjects such as
music, euthanasia and the environment.
In recent years, the role of religion in the study and conduct of
international affairs has become increasingly important. Rethinking
Religion and World Affairs seeks to question and remedy the
problematic neglect of religion in extant scholarship. Drawing on
the work of leading scholars as well as policy makers and analysts,
this volume will form the first comprehensive and authoritative
guide to the interconnections of religion and global politics.
These essays grapple with puzzles, issues and questions concerning
religion and world affairs in six major areas. Contributors
critically revisit the "secularization thesis, " which proclaimed
the steady erosion of religion's public presence as an effect of
modernization; explore the relationship between religion,
democracy, and the juridico-political discourse of human rights;
assess the role of religion in fomenting, ameliorating, and
redressing violent conflict; and consider the value of religious
beliefs, actors, and institutions to the delivery of humanitarian
aid and the fostering of socio-economic development. Later chapters
address the representation of religion in the expanding global
media landscape, the unique place of religion in American foreign
policy, and the dilemmas it presents. Rethinking Religion and World
Affairs will become an invaluable resource for professional and
emerging scholars, journalists, policy makers, diplomats, and
others concerned in their personal or professional capacities with
religion and international affairs.
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