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Synopsis: Can the comparison of two theologians vastly separated in
space and time help contemporary theologians to think better? This
book argues that it can. Specifically, this book argues that the
novel and burgeoning discipline of comparative theology is a
powerful method for gaining critical insight into our inherited
worldviews. More important, it argues that the critical insights
gained through comparison can produce constructive theology or, in
other words, revised and renewed worldviews. New comparisons
produce new questions, and new questions produce new answers. In
order to demonstrate the power of this process, the book compares
two preeminent theologians, Sri Ramanuja of the Hindu tradition and
Friedrich Schleiermacher of the Christian tradition. Each argues
that God sustains the universe at every moment of its existence,
but they work out the divine sustenance in very different ways. By
comparing their description of God's continual preservation of the
universe, this book asks original, unfamiliar questions of each.
Then, it speculatively suggests possible answers to those
questions, inviting Ramanuja and Schleiermacher to respond to the
challenges raised. This method demonstrates the incisive power of
comparative theology to generate critical tension, as well as the
creative power of comparative theology to resolve that very
tension. Endorsements: "This is a fine example of comparative
theology in action. If readers want to know how the discipline
works when it works well, they can turn to Ramanuja and
Schleiermacher." -Francis X. Clooney Director of the Center for the
Study of World Religions, Harvard Divinity School "Across time and
cultures, great figures within a single religious tradition become
part of an ongoing scholarly interaction and argument. Only
recently has this intimacy of conversation been extended across
religious boundaries themselves. Sydnor offers us a theological
dialogue between two giants, the Vaisnavite thinker Ramanuja and
the Protestant theologian Schleiermacher. Sensitive to the
distinctive settings of each, he is able to draw them into a
fruitful collaboration around the questions of human and cosmic
dependence on the divine. This is a constructive comparative
theology that focuses the reader on the substance of these writers
rather than the mechanics of interreligious study. Sydnor's book
will be of interest both to those who value the depth of research
behind the comparison and to those who are simply looking for
theological light on the experience of absolute dependence." --S.
Mark Heim Samuel Abbot Professor of Christian Theology Andover
Newton Theological School "In this acutely reasoned, stirring, and
accessible analysis a blossoming
philosopher-theologian-pastor-educator, Jon Paul Sydnor, brings
forth accurate, in-depth readings of primary works by
Schleiermacher and Ramanuja. Using up-to-date procedures, his
comparison of these two highly discerning, seminal thinkers enables
a still wider conversation between Christians and Hindus today.
Here newly honed questions, observations, and insights vie with
each other for attention. Overall, Sydnor's work calls forth a
pondering over meanings and prospects that only this emergent field
of comparative theology can offer. Within this new movement, it
will bear the reputation of a pioneering work." --Terrence N. Tice
Professor Emeritus of Philosophy University of Michigan Author
Biography: Jon Paul Sydnor has studied at the University of
Virginia, Princeton Theological Seminary, and Boston College. He
currently teaches world religions at Emmanuel College in Boston.
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