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(Ebook) Divine Enticement : Theological Seductions by Karmen MacKendrick ISBN 9780823246335, 0823246337

  • SKU: EBN-51384948
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Authors:Karmen MacKendrick
Pages:319 pages.
Year:2012
Editon:1
Publisher:Fordham University Press
Language:english
File Size:1.86 MB
Format:pdf
ISBNS:9780823246335, 0823246337
Categories: Ebooks

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(Ebook) Divine Enticement : Theological Seductions by Karmen MacKendrick ISBN 9780823246335, 0823246337

Theology usually appears to us to be dogmatic, judgmental, condescending, maybe therapeutic, or perhaps downright fantasticalGbut seldom enticing. Divine Enticement takes as its starting point that the meanings of theological concepts are not so much logical, truth-valued propositionsGaffirmative or negativeGas they are provocations and evocations. Thus it argues for the seductiveness of both theology and its subjectGfor, in fact, infinite seduction and enticement as the very sense of theological query. The divine name is one by which we are drawn toward the limits of thought, language, and flesh. The use of language in such conceptualization calls more than it designates. This is not a flaw or a result of vagueness or imprecision in theological language but rather marks the correspondence of such language to its subject: that which, outside of or at the limit of our thought, draws us as an enticement to desire, not least to intellectual desire. Central to the text is the strange semiotics of divine naming, as a call on that for which there cannot be a standard referent. The entanglement of sign and body, not least in interpretations of the Christian incarnation, both grounds and complicates the theological abstractions. A number of traditional notions in Christian theology are reconceived here as enticements, modes of drawing the desires of both body and mind: faith as Gthinking with assentG; sacraments as Gvisible wordsG read in community; ethics as responsiveness to beauty; prayer as the language of address; scripture as the story of meaning-making. All of these culminate in a sense of a call to and from the purely possible, the open space into which we can be enticed, within which we can be divinely enticing.
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