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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Aspects of religions (non-Christian) > Theology
FEW BRITISH EXPLORERS IN ARABIA have produced books whose
importance as travelogues is trans-cended by their literary
quality. One such is The Holy Cities of Arabia, published to
critical acclaim in 1928, with its author hailed as a worthy
successor to Burckhardt, Burton and Doughty. Unrivalled among works
by Western travellers to Islam's holy cities, this account of a
pilgrimage to Makkah in 1925-26 is made all the more remark-able by
its author's timing. In 1925 `Abd al-`Aziz Ibn Saud brought to an
end centuries of rule over the Hijaz by the Hashimite sharifs and
their Ottoman overlords. Rutter, living as a learned Muslim Arab in
a Makkan household, had a ringside seat as Riyadh imposed its writ
on Islam's holy cities. As striking as his account of life in
Makkah before modernization are his interviews with Ibn Saud, and
his journeys to al-Ta'if and to the City of the Prophet,
al-Madinah. The Holy Cities of Arabia proved to be its author's
only full-length work. After a brief career as a Middle East
traveller, Rutter lapsed into obscurity. This new edition aims to
revive a neglected masterpiece and to establish Rutter's
reputation. Little was known about him until now and the
introduction tells the story of his life for the first time,
assessing his talents as a travel writer and analysing his
significance as a British convert.
Based on a constructive reading of Scripture, the apostolic and
patristic traditions and deeply rooted in the sacramental
experience and spiritual ethos of the Orthodox Church, John
Zizioulas offers a timely anthropological and cosmological
perspective of human beings as "priests of creation" in addressing
the current ecological crisis. Given the critical and urgent
character of the global crisis and by adopting a clear line of
argumentation, Zizioulas describes a vision based on a
compassionate and incarnational conception of the human beings as
liturgical beings, offering creation to God for the life of the
world. He encourages the need for deeper interaction with modern
science, from which theology stands to gain an appreciation of the
interconnection of every aspect of materiality and life with
humankind. The result is an articulate and promising vision that
inspires a new ethos, or way of life, to overcome our alienation
from the rest of creation.
What happens when Edward Schillebeeckx's theology crosses paths
with contemporary public theology? This volume examines the
theological heritage that Schillebeeckx has left behind, as well as
it critically assesses its relevance for temporary theological
scene. In tracing the way(s) in which Schillebeeckx observed and
examined his own context's increasing secularization and
concomitant development toward atheism, the contributors to this
volume indicate the potential directions for a contemporary public
theology that pursues the path which Schillebeeckx has trodden. The
essays in the first part of this volume indicate a different
theological self-critique undertaken in response to developments in
the public sphere. This is followed by a thorough examination of
the degree to which Schillebeeckx succeeded in leading Christian
theology ahead without merely accommodating the Christian tradition
to current societal trends. The third part of the volume discusses
the issues of climate change, social conceptions of progress, as
well as the evolutionary understandings of the origins and purpose
of religions. The final part examines Schillebeeckx's soteriology
to contemporary discussions about wholeness.
This volume is a call to re-examine assumptions about what care is
and how it be practised. Rather than another demand for radical
reform, it makes the case for thinking clearly and critically. It
urges people living with HIV to become full partners in designing
and implementing their own care and for caregivers to accept them
in this role.
The earliest scientific studies of Jewish messianism were conducted
by the scholars of the Wissenschaft des Judentums school,
particularly Heinrich Graetz, the first great Jewish historian of
the Jews since Josephus. These researches were invaluable because
they utilized primary sources in print and manuscript which had
been previously unknown or used only in polemics. The Wissenschaft
studies themselves, however, prove to be polemics as well on closer
inspection. Among the goals of this group was to demonstrate that
Judaism is a rational and logical faith whose legitimacy and
historical progress deserve recognition by the nations of Europe.
Mystical and messianic beliefs which might undermine this image
were presented as aberrations or the result of corrosive foreign
influences on the Jews. Gershom Scholem took upon himself the task
of returning mysticism and messianism to their rightful central
place in the panorama of Jewish thought. Jewish messianism was, for
Scholem, a central theme in the philosophy and life of the Jews
throughout their history, shaped anew by each generation to fit its
specific hopes and needs. Scholem emphasized that this phenomenon
was essentially independent of messianic or millenarian trends
among other peoples. For example, in discussing messianism in the
early modern era Scholem describes a trunk of influence on the
Jewish psyche set off by the expulsion from Spain in 1492.
Described by Pope Pius XII as the most important theologian since
Thomas Aquinas, the Swiss pastor and theologian, Karl Barth,
continues to be a major influence on students, scholars and
preachers today.
Barth's theology found its expression mainly through his closely
reasoned fourteen-part magnum opus, Die Kirchliche Dogmatik. Having
taken over 30 years to write, the Church Dogmatics is regarded as
one of the most important theological works of all time, and
represents the pinnacle of Barth's achievement as a theologian.
Over four decades ago, the pre-eminent Jewish theologian, Abraham
Joshua Heschel, warned of a "second Holocaust" - a spiritual
genocide against Judaism that American Jews were perpetrating on
themselves. By engaging in assimilation and secularization, he
argued, Jews were losing their religious identity and, through it,
their identity as a people. In Faith Finding Meaning, Byron L.
Sherwin makes the case for a return to Jewish theology as a
foundation for restoring Jewish authenticity and for reversing
self-destructive assimilationist trends.
Rather than focusing on the abstract theological concepts presented
by Judaism, such as the existence and nature of God, Sherwin shifts
the center of the discussion to the quest for individual meaning.
As more Jews seek to affirm Judaism as a faith, they are
increasingly asking two questions: What is Judaism? How does
Judaism address my quest for meaning? This volume constructs a
portrait of the Jewish faith that is deeply rooted in both
classical and modern sources of Jewish thought. Jewish theological
thinking can be understood as a response to such visceral
existential issues as living in a covenantal relationship, finding
God in the world, approaching sacred scripture, and committing
ethical deeds. Finding this sort of individual meaning through
Jewish theology is, Sherwin argues, the viable path by which Jews
in the contemporary world can maintain identity amid assimilation.
Faith Finding Meaning will engage anyone seeking a refreshing new
approach to interpreting Jewish theology and a guide for faithful
living as the Jewish people move into the future.
Over three hundred years ago, the paramount modern Catholic
exegete, Cornelius a Lapide, S.J., wrote that the 25th of March,
2000, was the most likely date for the world to end. Catholic
Millenarianism does not let the day pass without comment. Catholic
Millenarianism offers an authoritative overview of Catholic
apocalyptic thought combined with detailed presentations by
specialists on nine major Catholic authors, such as Savonarola,
Luis de LeA3n, and AntA3nio Vieira. With its companion volumes,
Catholic Millenarianism illustrates a hold apocalyptic concerns had
on intellectual life, particularly between 1500 and 1900, rivaling
and influencing rationalism and skepticism. Catholics do not
ordinarily expect a messianic reign by earthly means. Catholic
Millenarianism shows instead what is common to Catholic authors:
their preoccupation with the relationship between linguistic
prophecies and the events they foretell. This makes the
perspectives offered as surprisingly diverse as their particular
times, and the book itself interesting and worth repeated reading.
Migration has long been associated with the social sciences.
However, as a phenomenon that provides windows into possibly new
forms of oppression and, at the same time, paths toward human
liberation a systematic theological look at contemporary migration
is long overdue. Building on the emerging interest on migration in
theology this book presents an intercultural theology of migration
drawn from the experience of Filipino women domestic workers in
Hong Kong in dialogue with theological ethics and liberationist
theologies. The result is a new look at the phenomenon of
contemporary migration.
The question of the progress, the apocalyptic end, and the
completion of history and the question of the life after death and
the resurrection of the human person differ and are interconnected
in the religions at the same time. The individual's completion and
the completion of the world, the historical communities and
humankind are conditional on each other.
The world religions offer more than an interpretation of present
history and the present world and existence of the human race. They
also convey to humankind a theory of world history and of history
before and above world history. This interpretation of universal
history in the religions can be apocalypticism as the theory of the
end of the world or apocalypticism and eschatology as the theory of
the end, completion, and transfiguration of world and history.
The completion of the world is inseparable from the completion
of the individual human life in immortality and vice versa.
Immortality is described in the Abrahamic religions as personal
resurrection; in Hinduism as entering the divine self, the Atman;
and in Buddhism as being united with the Buddha. How do the
religions interpret universal history and what statements do they
make about life after death?
Leading scholars of Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity,
and Islam have created with this volume a first-hand source of
information, which enables the reader to gain a better
understanding of these five world religions and their teachings
about the end of history and the life after death of the human
person.
In recent years there has been a bold revival in the field of
natural theology, where "natural theology" can be understood as the
attempt to demonstrate that God exists by way of reason, evidence,
and argument without the appeal to divine revelation. Today's
practitioners of natural theology have not only revived and recast
all of the traditional arguments in the field, but, by drawing upon
the findings of contemporary cosmology, chemistry, and biology,
have also developed a range of fascinating new ones. Contemporary
Arguments in Natural Theology brings together twenty experts
working in the field today. Together, they practice natural
theology from a wide range of perspectives, and show how the field
of natural theology is practiced today with a degree of diversity
and confidence not seen since the Middle Ages. Aimed primarily at
advanced undergraduates and graduate students, the volume will also
be of interest to researchers in philosophy, theology, biblical
studies, and religious studies, as an indispensable resource on
contemporary theistic proofs.
The studies that make up this book explore in what ways Israel's
sacred tradition developed into canonical scripture and in what
ways this sacred tradition was interpreted in early Judaism and
Christianity. This collection will stimulate continuing
investigation into the growth and interpretation of scripture in
the context of the Jewish and Christian communities of faith, and
will serve well as a reader for graduate courses with its focus on
early exegesis and intertextuality.
This is the first book to bring together studies of a wide
variety of millenarians who were active in the 17th and 18th
centuries in France, The Netherlands, Germany, Sweden, and eastern
Europe. It provides much food for thought for students and teachers
of early modern ideas, the history of philosophy and religion, and
the making of the modern world. It opens up many avenues for
further work.
The influence of millenarian thinking upon Cromwell's England is
well-known. The cultural and intellectual conceptions of the role
of millenarian ideas in the long' 18th century when, so the
official' story goes, the religious sceptics and deists of
Enlightened England effectively tarred such religious radicalism as
enthusiasm' has been less well examined. This volume endeavors to
revise this official' story and to trace the influence of
millenarian ideas in the science, politics, and everyday life of
England and America in the 17th and 18th centuries.
Science is a systematic presentation of truth. Theology is the most
important of all sciences. It is the science that treats of God and
of man in his relation to God. It is a systematic presentation of
revealed truth. As the basis of Astronomy is the universe of worlds
revealed by the telescope, and as the basis of Geology is the crust
of the earth, so the basis of Theology is the Divine revelation
found in the Holy Scriptures. The Theology of Entire
Sanctification, therefore, is a systematic presentation of the
doctrine of entire sanctification as derived from the written word
of God. Such a presentation we hope - with the help of the Holy
Spirit, which we here and now earnestly invoke - to attempt to give
in this book. May God bless the endeavor, and overrule our human
weakness, to the glory of His Name. Amen. It is a lamentable fact
that there is a large class of Christians to whom the subject of
entire sanctification is a matter of indifference. They hope, with
or without sufficient reason, that their sins are forgiven. They
propose to live moral and useful lives, and trust, again with or
without sufficient reason, that they will go to heaven when they
die.
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