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Virtue in Dialogue - Belief, Religious Diversity, and Womens Interreligious Encounter (Microfilm)
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Virtue in Dialogue - Belief, Religious Diversity, and Womens Interreligious Encounter (Microfilm)
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Religious diversity is a persistent theological predicament for
Christian thinkers. Historically, theologians have wrestled with
the relationship between believing Christians and religious others.
The clash between the Christian doctrine of salvation and
non-Christian belief systems often comes down to the question, can
non-Christians be "saved"? In a pluralist world, a second question
arises: can believers of divergent traditions reconcile their
theological differences? Is the logical answer that one believer
abandon her faith convictions and promote a relativistic mindset?
This book draws upon original research, documenting conversations
by women in an interreligious dialogue group, to show that when
believers converse in honesty, empathy, and patience--in short,
when engaged in virtuous dialogue--they can bridge the gap left by
theory. When believers from different faiths come together in open
conversation, it need not lead to relativism but, instead, can lead
to strengthened belief. Sharing convictions with people who believe
differently, sincere believers find they often come to hold their
own core beliefs with newfound strength. "With her textured study
of a women's interreligious dialogue group, Brecht offers a
refreshing epistemology of religious belief attentive to how people
actually believe. She allows her reader to learn not from abstract
theories alone, but from these live and lively women. Through them
we are introduced to the virtuous practices that might allow us to
truly converse across the lines of religious difference. From them
we learn the value of forming religious beliefs in interfaith
contexts. By taking seriously both current epistemologies and these
women's experiences, Brecht offers an epistemological theory
accountable to the practical exercise of interreligious dialogue.
This book is a significant contribution for interfaith studies and
epistemology alike." --Jeannine Hill Fletcher, author of Monopoly
on Salvation: A Feminist Approach to Religious Pluralism "In this
important argument for a new way of doing religious epistemology,
Mara Brecht ranges widely and deeply to make her case. . . .
Contemporary theories have moved to a 'best practice' approach, a
'naturalized' epistemology that looks at what people do when they
know. But when the naturalized epistemologists turn to religious
belief, they fail to analyze religious practice, but apply norms
from science and common sense--and religious faith is neither of
these. . . . Rather than leaving her theory in the abstract realm,
Brecht argues for four cardinal virtues and some necessary
'meta-level' dispositions that are required for a virtue
epistemology of religious belief in the context of diversity--as
exemplified by the group she studied for years." --Terrence W.
Tilley, from the Foreword Mara Brecht is Assistant Professor of
Religious Studies at St. Norbert College in Green Bay, Wisconsin.
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