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Catholics and Millennialism - A Theo-Linguistic Guide (Hardcover, New edition)
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Catholics and Millennialism - A Theo-Linguistic Guide (Hardcover, New edition)
Series: American University Studies, 350
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Philosophers of religion such as Mark Kingwell regard millenarian
dreams as humanity's most powerful hopes for transformation,
transcendence, apocalypse, and utopia. In Catholics and
Millennialism: A Theo-Linguistic Guide, Warren A. Kappeler III
explores the insights of critical discourse theory to examine the
impact of millenarian groups upon Catholics. He examines
theo-linguistic practices among present-day Catholics through
allegorical interpretation, fundamentalism, and neo-literalism.
Utilizing surveys of pre-millennial movements as revealed in
academic research by Michael Cuneo, William Dinges, and Sandra
Zimdars-Swartz, as well as post-millennial collaboration by
progressive Catholics such as Hans Kung, Matthew Fox, and Karen
Armstrong; Kappeler argues that apocalyptic stories and media
images in today's popular culture promote a self-dramatization that
encourages sympathetic Catholics to interpret their life experience
within the grammar of the millennium myth. While some commentators
argue that the new age audience is driven by populist reasoning
inside church history and culture, a critical discourse analysis
perspective reveals that millenarian movements have provided a
language resource for a great number of social, cultural, and
political conflicts in the history of Western civilization.
Consequently, the mainstream history of the Catholic Church has
been dedicated to the a-millennial viewpoint of Saint Augustine of
Hippo. Considering these platforms, Kappeler sketches a mediating
position between the church's millennial factions called Proleptic
Adventism based upon a dialectical approach to both eschatology and
incarnational spirituality. Ultimately Kappeler's findings offer
hope to a postmodern world by looking to the future instead of the
past, by analyzing popular culture in its dynamism and its
contradictions, stressing the spiritual elements of liberation and
participation, and by expressing itself in sacramental action and
analogical reasoning.
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