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El. knyga: Augustine and Kierkegaard

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This volume is a continuation of our series exploring Saint Augustines influence on later thought, this time bringing the fifth century bishop into dialogue with 19th century philosopher, theologian, social critic, and originator of Existentialism, Soren Kierkegaard. The connections, contrasts, and sometimes surprising similarities of their thought are uncovered and analyzed in topics such as exile and pilgrimage, time and restlessness, inwardness and the church, as well as suffering, evil, and humility. The implications of this analysis are profound and far-reaching for theology, ecclesiology, and ethics.

Recenzijos

This book is a collection of fifteen clearly written and penetrating essays on the relation between Augustine and Kierkegaard. Written by both philosophers and theologians, the authors include many well-known scholars as well as some fresh and creative younger voices. Anyone interested in Kierkegaard or Augustine will learn much from this volume, which is a first-rate contribution to our understanding of both thinkers. -- C. Stephen Evans, Baylor University Kierkegaard's reading of Augustine, like Nietzsche's reading of Kierkegaard, is one of the great 'what ifs?' of intellectual interest. Kierkegaard, it has been shown, had little direct knowledge of Church Father's major writings, leaving a wonderful tangle of potential points of contact between the two great Christian thinkers hanging in the air. This many-sided collection starts to unpick and to sort some of these connections, exploring a wide range of topics about which the African and the Dane could have had much to say to each other, including faith, time, temptation, evil, freedom, beauty, love, humility, martyrdom, and the divine image. These are themes that richly resonate with creatures such as we aremetaphysically homeless and longing, questioningly, for our one eternal home. On all these topics, Augustine and Kierkegaard still have much to say, as this collection fully shows. -- George Pattison, University of Glasgow Over the last few decades, Kierkegaard scholarship has devoted increasing attention to those who had an influence on the Danes authorship. Felicitously, this trend has led to a reconsideration of the ways in which Kierkegaard both draws on and departs from the thought of Augustine of Hippo. The present book not only contributes to this reconsideration but does so in creative fashion, demonstrating that the connection between Augustine and Kierkegaard can hardly be reduced to, say, a handful of debates regarding Christian doctrine. Rather, these two great minds, particularly when placed in conversation, continue to stimulate our thinking on topics as diverse as time, beauty, and community. -- Christopher B. Barnett

Acknowledgment vii
Introduction ix
Kim Paffenroth
Helene Tallon Russell
PART I THE DIVINE/HUMAN RELATIONSHIP
1(88)
1 Justification within the Limits of Anthropology Alone: Augustine and Kierkegaard on Freedom and Grace
3(24)
Curtis L. Thompson
2 The Image of God in Augustine and Kierkegaard
27(16)
Matthew Drever
3 Augustine, Kierkegaard, and Evil
43(20)
Erik M. Hanson
4 The Spiritual Trial of Divine Seduction: Temptation and the Confessing Self
63(26)
Simon D. Podmore
PART II TIME
89(40)
5 Kierkegaard and Augustine on Time
91(20)
Karl Aho
6 Eternal Becoming and Temporal Understanding: Kierkegaard and Augustine on Time, Faith, and Knowledge
111(18)
Robert Reed
PART III HUMANS AND THE FINITE, MATERIAL WORLD
129(50)
7 Sacrament and Self-Construction: Augustine and Kierkegaard on Love for the Finite
131(18)
Janna Gonwa
8 Beauty Matters: Augustine and Kierkegaard on Sensual Beauty
149(20)
Peder Jothen
9 You Must Change Your Life: Kierkegaard and Augustine on Reading
169(10)
Thomas J. Millay
PART IV HOME AND HOMELESSNESS
179(52)
10 Hidden Inwardness
181(14)
Ralph Harper
11 Home, Love, and the Self: A Dialogue with Augustine and Kierkegaard
195(18)
Natalia Marandiuc
12 Existence as Pilgrimage: Echoes of Augustinian Thought in Kierkegaard
213(18)
Robert B. Puchniak
PART V HUMAN COMMUNITIES AND ETHICS
231(66)
13 Augustine and Kierkegaard on the Church: Nurturing Mother or Challenging Provocateur?
233(22)
Lee C. Barrett
14 In Praise of Humility: From Augustine to Kierkegaard
255(22)
W. Glenn Kirkconnell
15 Augustine and Kierkegaard on Martyrdom and "Polite Persecution"
277(20)
Jack Mulder Jr.
Bibliography 297(16)
Index 313(6)
About the Editors and Contributors 319
Kim Paffenroth is professor of religious studies and the director of the Honors Program at Iona College.

John Doody is professor of philosophy and Robert M. Birmingham Chair in humanities at Villanova University.

Helene Tallon Russell is associate professor of theology at Christian Theological Seminary.