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El. knyga: Revelation in a Pluralistic World

(Full Professor, Dominican University College)
  • Formatas: 376 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 08-Sep-2022
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780192688194
  • Formatas: 376 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 08-Sep-2022
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780192688194

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Since the Enlightenment, the churches have progressively suffered a severe loss of status because of their belief that revelation is realized only in Christianity. The suggestion that Christian revelation might be truer than other so-called revelations seems to be preposterous. This book argues that this insistence has often remained unnuanced and simplistic, with the consequence that not only unbelievers as well as believers of other religions, but even numerous Christians no longer agree with the primacy of a truth revealed in Jesus Christ. The book addresses the difficulties affecting the interpretation of belief, given modernity's concerns.

The volume sets out a provisional synthesis on revelation and it makes available much expository and historical information. It correlates distinctions between pair members such as the natural and the supernatural, conceptualism and intellectualism, heart and reason, subjectivity and objectivity, limited perspective and universal viewpoint, permanence of doctrine and historicity, Christian and non-Christian claims regarding truth, revelation and divine speech, moderate and radical pluralism, Jesus absolutized and Jesus relativized. The thrust of the argument is towards an appropriation of what is best in ancient, medieval, and modern traditions on revelation. This book delineates, in an original way, a position on revelation that is at once traditional and relevant for today. It accepts many values brought to the fore by modernity and draws from exegetes, historians, philosophers, and theologians. Its inspiration comes principally from the Bible, Thomas Aquinas, John Henry Newman, and
Bernard Lonergan.

Recenzijos

The book offers much that generates fresh thinking on the topic of revelation, and such material can be the basis of further discussion within one's tradition and in dialogue with others. * Rev. Mark P. Hertenstein, Reading Religion * The book is to be recommended as a learned introduction to modern questions about revelation and as a sensible effort to embrace moderate pluralism. It provides a fruitful openness to different traditions, while never losing the belief in the uniqueness of Christian revelation. * Paolo Monzani, The Heythrop Journal * The book is to be recommended as a learned introduction to modern questions about revelation and as a sensible effort to embrace moderate pluralism. lt provides a fruitful openness to different traditions, while never los”ng the belief in the uniqueness of Christian revelation. * Paolo Monzani, The Heythrop Journal * This is an insightful and clearly written work that will be of value to students and professors of theology at the graduate level. His breadth of scholarship and depth of insight are evident in every chapter of the book. * Neil Ormerod, Alphacrucis University College, Parramatta, NSW, Australia *

Introduction 1(8)
PART ONE THE GROUNDWORK
1 A Basic Characterization Inspired by the Past
9(22)
Biblical Revelation and Inspiration
9(2)
Revelation as Anthropological
11(4)
Revelation as Evolutionary
15(2)
Revelation as Christological
17(1)
Revelation and Inspiration According to Thomas Aquinas
18(5)
The Symbolic and the Literal
23(5)
Concluding Remarks
28(3)
PART TWO THE CHALLENGE OF MODERNITY
2 Modernity's Representations of Belief
31(38)
The Abolition of the Supernatural
32(3)
Conceptualism versus Anticonceptualism
35(9)
Voices of the Heart and Voices of Reason
44(5)
Revelation as Divine Self-Expression
49(4)
Feeling, Faith, and Belief
53(5)
Liberal Protestantism
58(9)
Concluding Remarks
67(2)
3 Catholic Responses
69(34)
In France and in Germany
69(9)
John Henry Newman: The Development of Doctrine
78(11)
Vatican I and Vatican II
89(5)
Hans Urs von Balthasar: The Beauty of the Figure
94(8)
Concluding Remarks
102(1)
4 The Problem of Historical Knowledge
103(42)
Lessing's Difficulty
104(3)
Kierkegaard's Reply
107(2)
Ernst Troeltsch: Historicism
109(12)
Karl Barth: Obedience to the Word of God
121(8)
Wolfhart Pannenberg: The Meaning of History
129(11)
Concluding Remarks
140(5)
PART THREE CONTEMPORARY DISCUSSIONS
5 Paul Ricceur: Testimony and Hope
145(33)
Sense and Reference
145(3)
The World of the Text
148(5)
The Work of the Text
153(3)
Overcoming Religious Illusion
156(2)
Testimony
158(4)
Revelation
162(6)
Truth in Faith and Hope
168(3)
Four Epistemological Questions
171(5)
Concluding Remarks
176(2)
6 Amid the Current Clash of Views
178(43)
Postmodernism and Universal Truths
178(9)
Intercultural Points of View
187(5)
A Moderate Pluralism
192(8)
Faith Confessions and Doctrines
200(2)
Testimony and Authority
202(6)
A Normative Tradition
208(4)
The Tradition and the Traditions
212(5)
Concluding Remarks
217(4)
PART FOUR REVELATION APART FROM JESUS?
7 Claims Made by Other Religions
221(21)
Hinduism
221(4)
Buddhism
225(5)
Rabbinic Judaism
230(5)
Islam
235(3)
Concluding Remarks
238(4)
8 Revelation, or God-Speech?
242(29)
The Issue
243(2)
For a Clear-Cut Definition of Revelation
245(3)
Divine Communications in Non-Christian Religions
248(2)
Two Church Fathers
250(3)
Incompatibilities among Religions
253(5)
The Recipients of Inspiration and of Revelation
258(1)
Comparative Theology, or Comparative Philosophy?
259(5)
God's Revelation and God's Speech
264(5)
Concluding Remarks
269(2)
9 Can We Either Absolutize or Relativize Jesus Christ?
271(18)
Paradigmatic Individuals
272(2)
Some Objections to the Universality of Jesus
274(4)
Jesus' Uniqueness
278(2)
Christ's Humanity
280(1)
Christomorphism Instead of Christocentrism
281(7)
Concluding Remarks
288(1)
Conclusion 289(4)
Bibliography 293(12)
Index of Names 305(3)
Index of Subjects 308
Louis Roy is a member of the Dominican Order and he holds a doctorate from Cambridge University. He taught at the grass-root level and at the Institut de Pastorale in Montréal before becoming a Full Professor of theology and philosophy at Boston College for twenty-one years, until 2006. He now teaches at the Dominican University College in Ottawa. He has published books in English, French, Spanish, Italian, and Vietnamese. He has written numerous articles on the affective, intellectual, and mystical aspects of religious experience, faith and psychology, the question of God, revelation, and interreligious dialogue, especially between Christianity and Buddhism.