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Soren Kirkegaard and Maurice Blondel are positioned together in a
dialogue regarding the vision of the supernatural. Maurice Ashley
Agbaw-Ebai draws from this a sharper image of the preeminent place
religious experience possesses in human life and thought.
Kirkegaard's lament of Christian lack of fervor and Blondel's
concern that religion and philosophy no longer interact are both
examined and Agbaw-Ebai concludes that they both indicate the same
outcome: a "dominant leveling of society" that robs religion of its
particularity. This devastates the individual because he is no
longer challenged to seek a relationship with God and expose
himself to the supernatural. The boundlessness of man must be
acknowledged or else his actions will never be understood, and
religious experience and philosophy must coexist with mutual
reference or self-knowledge will never amount to the discovery of
supernatural destiny. And this, asserts Agbaw-Ebai, is the shared
urgency of both Kirkegaard and Blondel. Like these philosophers who
have preceded him, Agbaw-Ebai exhorts us to never allow the sense
of our relation to the supernatural as a settled matter. The
philosophy of religion we have inherited does not protect us from
having to confront our own subjectivity with autonomy: to be God
without God and against God, or to be God with and through God.
Fr. Maurice Ashley Agbaw-Ebai, a native of Cameroon, has written a
fresh, exciting new study of the lifelong engagement of Josef
Ratzinger, later Pope Benedict XVI, with the German Enlightenment
and its contemporary manifestations and heirs. Contemporary
European disdain for organized religion and the rise in secularism
on that continent has deep roots in the German Enlightenment. To
understand contemporary Europe, one must return to this crucial
epoch in its history, to those who shaped the European mind of this
era, and to a study of the ideas they espoused and propagated.
These ideas, for good or for ill, have taken hold in other parts of
the modern world, being incarnated in many minds and institutions
in contemporary society and threatening to enthrone a disfigured
rationality without faith or a sense of Transcendence. Ratzinger's
extraordinary and sympathetic understanding of the sources of
contemporary secularism equipped him to appreciate the gains of the
Enlightenment, while still being a fierce critic of the losses
humanity has suffered when reason falsely excludes faith. Fr.
Agbaw-Ebai's account reveals Ratzinger, in relation to his various
interlocutors, to be the truly "enlightened" one because he
demonstrates a truly balanced understanding of the human mind. To
be truly rational one must be able to hold to faith and reason
both, reason informed by faith in Jesus Christ. A particular merit
of this book is Agbaw-Ebai's presentation of Ratzinger's treatment
of the German Enlightenment's greatest contributors: Kant,
Nietzche, Hegel and Habermas, among others. In the postscript
George Weigel characterizes what this study accomplishes in the
larger framework of scholarship. "[Ratzinger's] position remains
too often misunderstood, and sometimes deliberately misinterpreted,
throughout the whole Church. And to misunderstand, or misinterpret,
Ratzinger is to misunderstand or misinterpret both the modern
history of theology and the Second Vatican Council." Agbaw-Ebai
masterfully positions Ratzinger correctly in the history of ideas,
and exhibits why Ratzinger will be remembered as one of its main
players. Pure rationalists and true believers are equally indebted
to him.
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