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This book brings together academic scholars from across various
religious traditions to reflect on the beauty they find in
traditions other than their own. They examine these aspects and
reflect on how they inform and constructively assist with
rethinking their own religious worldviews and practices. Each
scholar investigates the various implications, questions, insights,
and challenges that are generated in the process of doing so.
Traditions discussed include Asatru Heathenism, Buddhism,
Catholicism, Evangelical Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism,
LDS Mormon Christianity, Lutheranism, Presbyterianism, Sikhism,
Sufism, Western Buddhism, and Zen Mahayana Buddhism. Instead of
focusing only or primarily on the theory and practice of
interreligious dialogue, this book presents living examples of
learning from other religious traditions, identities, and persons.
In Finding All Things In God, Hans Gustafson proposes
pansacramentalism as holding the potential to find the divine in
all things and all things in the divine. Such a proposition carries
significant interreligious implications, particularly in the
practice of theology. Presupposing theological practice as divorced
from spirituality (lived religious experience), Gustafson presents
pansacramentalism as a bridge between the two. In so doing,
Gustafson offers a history of spirituality, sketching the
foundations of a classical approach to sacramentality (through
Aquinas) as well as a contemporary approach to the same (through
Rahner and Chauvet). Through three fascinating case studies, this
book presents particular instances of sacramentality in lived
religious experience. Gustafson offers an exciting method of 'doing
theology', one which is entirely compatible with the
interdisciplinary field of interreligious studies.
This book brings together academic scholars from across various
religious traditions to reflect on the beauty they find in
traditions other than their own. They examine these aspects and
reflect on how they inform and constructively assist with
rethinking their own religious worldviews and practices. Each
scholar investigates the various implications, questions, insights,
and challenges that are generated in the process of doing so.
Traditions discussed include Asatru Heathenism, Buddhism,
Catholicism, Evangelical Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism,
LDS Mormon Christianity, Lutheranism, Presbyterianism, Sikhism,
Sufism, Western Buddhism, and Zen Mahayana Buddhism. Instead of
focusing only or primarily on the theory and practice of
interreligious dialogue, this book presents living examples of
learning from other religious traditions, identities, and persons.
In an increasingly connected world, the question of how different
religious traditions relate to one another is more urgent than
ever. The study of interreligious encounters and relations, by no
means a new endeavor, has recently emerged as a formal multi- and
interdisciplinary academic field that seeks not only to understand
how worldviews and ways of life interact and intersect, but also to
suggest avenues of constructive dialogue. Interreligious Studies
represents a milestone achievement, bringing together thirty-six
scholars from four continents to produce "dispatches" on the
current state of this burgeoning field. This volume probes the
context, parameters, and contours of interreligious studies (IRS),
including its relation to other disciplines, its promise as a field
of research in secular and nonsecular contexts, its particular
terminology and methodology, its civic agenda, and the various
scholarly profiles of those who pursue it. Other topics taken up
include historical examples of interfaith dialogue, theological and
philosophical considerations of truth-seeking in interreligious
encounter, and contemporary agendas such as the decolonization of
the study of religion and the obligation to respond to
anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, and xenoglossophobia. Whatever
possibilities IRS might hold, there first must be a working
definition of the field and its praxis. Interreligious Studies
points in this direction as it highlights the practical knowledge
generated by IRS: how to cultivate empathy, make peace and build
nations, promote scholarly activism, and foster meaningful
interreligious relations. Scholars and students who are serious
about engaging the many dynamic conversations blossoming within
this nascent field will be well served by the contributions of this
volume.
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