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The Guide to Gethsemane - Anxiety, Suffering, Death (Hardcover)
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The Guide to Gethsemane - Anxiety, Suffering, Death (Hardcover)
Series: Perspectives in Continental Philosophy
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Anxiety, suffering and death are not simply the "ills" of our
society, nor are they uniquely the product of a sick and sinful
humanity. We must all some day confront them, and we continually
face their implications long before we do. In that sense, the
Garden of Gethsemane is not merely a garden "outside the walls" of
Jerusalem but also the essential horizon for all of us, whether we
are believers or not. Emmanuel Falque explores, with no small
measure of doubt, Heidegger's famous statement that by virtue of
Christianity's claims of salvation and the afterlife, its believers
cannot authentically experience anxiety in the face of death. In
this theological development of the Passion, already widely debated
upon its publication in French, Falque places a radical emphasis on
the physicality and corporeality of Christ's suffering and death,
marking the continuities between Christ's Passion and our own
orientation to the mortality of our bodies. Beginning with an
elaborate reading of the divine and human bodies whose suffering is
masterfully depicted in the Isenheim Altarpiece, and written in the
wake of the death of a close friend, Falques's study is both
theologically rigorous and marked by deeply human concerns. Falque
is at unusual pains to elaborate the question of death in terms not
merely of faith, but of a "credible Christianity" that remains
meaningful to non-Christians, holding, with Maurice Blondel, that
"the important thing is not to address believers but to say
something which counts in the eyes of unbelievers." His account is
therefore as much a work of philosophy as of theology-and of
philosophy explicated not through abstractions but through familiar
and ordinary experience. Theology's task, for Falque, is to
understand that human problems of the meaning of existence apply
even to Christ, at least insofar as he lives in and shares our
finitude. In Falque's remarkable account, Christ takes upon himself
the burden of suffering finitude, so that he can undertake a
passage through it, or a transformation of it. This book, a key
text from one the most remarkable of a younger generation of
philosophers and theologians, will be widely read and debated by
all who hold that theology and philosophy has the most to offer
when it eschews easy answers and takes seriously our most
anguishing human experiences.
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