Description
Book SynopsisTrade ReviewThe author offers a scintillating resume of contemporary theology from the arresting viewpoint of free creation, showing how some thinkers have failed to take that obvious starting point, as well as those who have illuminated us thereby. DeHart turns a profound study into an exciting read. -- David B. Burrell, C.S.C., University of Notre Dame, USA
The order of the world to God is a basic theme of Christian vocation and so of theology. Getting it wrong distorts our self-understanding and service. Drawing superb and sometimes startling lessons from Aquinas, Kierkegaard, and others, Paul DeHart gets it right. This book is smart, learned, and wise. -- Jeremy D. Wilkins, Boston College, USA
Table of ContentsIntroduction Part One: Cultus Mentis: Accommodating the Endless Object 1. Can Pascal Forgive Descartes? God’s Ambiguous Infinity 2. Absolute Dependence or Infinite Desire: Subjective Alignment with God in Schleiermacher and Kierkegaard 3. “The Passage from Mind to Heart is So Long . . .” Kierkegaard’s Repetition and the Ontology of Agency 4. f(S)I/s :The Instance of Pattern in Kathryn Tanner’s Theology
Part Two: Dogma and the Infinite God: Trinity, Christology, Grace 5. On the Contrary: Thomistic Second Thoughts on Eberhard Jüngel 6. John Milbank’s Divine Comedy: Not Funny Enough
Part Three: Aquinas and God’s Ideas: The Impossible Mind of the Creator 7: “Nothing in this book is true, but it’s exactly how things are” 8. Eclipse of the Divine Mind: The Divine Ideas as Anti-Platonic Epistemology 9. The Creature Makes Itself: The Divine Ideas as Anti-Platonic Soteriology 10. Improvising the Paradigms: The Divine Ideas as Anti-Platonic Ontology Bibliography Index