Recent Posts

Stuff Elsewhere

Stuff You Might Find Here


Scribe Member

Now Reading

Planned books:

Current books:

  • The Wanting Seed (Norton Paperback Fiction)

    The Wanting Seed (Norton Paperback Fiction) by Anthony Burgess

  • Freethinkers: A History of American Secularism

    Freethinkers: A History of American Secularism by Susan Jacoby

  • On Secularization: Towards A Revised General Theory

    On Secularization: Towards A Revised General Theory by David Martin

  • The Desecularization of the World: Resurgent Religion and World Politics

    The Desecularization of the World: Resurgent Religion and World Politics by Unknown

Recent books:

View full Library

Archives

Info/Log In

Stats

FireStats iconPowered by FireStats

Christianity in Nutshell - Orthodox Style

In the opening of The Beauty of the Infinite: The Aesthetics of Christian Truth, David Bentley Hart offers a fantastic and compelling description of Christianity.

The earliest confession of Christian faith - kurios Iasous - meant nothing less radical than Christ’s peace, having suffered upon the cross the decisive rejection of the powers of this world, had been raised up by God as the true form of human existence: an eschatologically perfect love, now made invulnerable to all the violences of time, and yet also made incomprehensibly present in the midst of history, because God’s final judgment had already befallen the world in the paschal vindication of Jesus of Nazareth.

If that is in the first paragraph, it is clear that this is as an important work of theological construction for this century as any.  I am looking forward to it in the months ahead - after I finish reading about 5 other books.  I am also going to read through Lossky’s The Mystical Theology of the Eastern Church.  I find that much of the response to rationalistic atheism has been in terms of rationalism, and the Eastern perspectives of wisdom and mystagogy seem to offer a very different way to respond - especially through Hart’s analysis.  After all, it was through aesthetics that Schleiermacher responded to the “cultured despisers” in 1799.

I could totally be Eastern Orthodox for a lot of reasons.  My Ukrainian ancestors would be proud.

Trackbacks

close Reblog this comment
blog comments powered by Disqus