Description
Book SynopsisFrom time to time, both believers and nonbelievers envy those with more faith. In this book, Hermen Kroesbergen coins the concept of faith envy as an angle to investigate faith and religious language, and provide a new direction for the philosophy of religion. For far too long, the philosophy of religion has focused on statements of faith concerning superempirical powers, forgetting that if they would ever be able to prove these statements, they cease to be religious. Kroesbergen explores the possibility of using the angle of faith envy for a much-needed alternative approach, using the philosophers Søren Kierkegaard, Ludwig Wittgenstein, and Simone Weil as guides. Their lives and works have often been studied for what they have to say about religious beliefs; here, however, the focus is on what they have to say about the faith they envy. Our own faith envy, and Kierkegaard, Wittgenstein, and Weil’s struggle to make sense of it provides a deeper insight into what faith is and could be. This book is a timely and provocative intervention in a philosophy of religion that has reached a dead end, and a society that is deeply troubled about faith but envies it nonetheless.
Trade ReviewYou may have thought yourself a believer or non-believer until now. After having joined Hermen Kroesbergen in his philosophical journey, you may be less sure about that. In this eloquently written book, he both clarifies and intensifies the mystery of what it means to have faith. Having faith? Wrong question, he argues. Envying faith, that will tell you more. Faith then appears to be not a set of beliefs about the world but a particular response to whatever may happen to you. A creative plea for a new concept of faith in the philosophy of religion.
-- Frits de Lange, Protestant Theological University and the University of Stellenbosch
Hermen Kroesbergen expertly introduces the concept of faith envy, discussing it in relation to three exemplary thinkers of the last two centuries: Kierkegaard, Wittgenstein, and Weil. Not only are the lives and ideas of these thinkers illuminated in novel ways, but Kroesbergen also enriches his analysis with pertinent illustrations from literature, films, and contemporary popular culture. Both informative and provocative, the book exhibits a penetrating inquiry into faith that warrants further attention from theologians, philosophers of religion, and others interested in what it means to have faith or to want it.
-- Mikel Burley, University of Leeds
In this wise and thought-provoking book, Kroesbergen develops a conception of what an ‘enviable faith’ might look like. By weaving together central themes from Wittgenstein, Kierkegaard, and Weil, Kroesbergen shows that traditional approaches to the question of what attitude faith is are misguided. The faith that expresses itself in feelings of ‘absolute safety’ or joyful acceptance of the will of God come what may, is not predictive, does not require belief in super-empirical entities, and does not render one impervious to future harm. It rather consists in an attitude of commitment that requires seeing the world in a certain way.
-- Genia Schönbaumsfeld, University of Southampton
Table of ContentsChapter 1: Kierkegaard - More Than an Idea
Chapter 2: Wittgenstein - Surrendering Your Self
Chapter 3: Weil - Open to the World
Chapter 4: The Answers of Faith
Chapter 5: The Safety of Faith