Description

Book Synopsis
Could the best thing about religion be the heresies it spawns? Leading intellectuals in interwar Europe thought so. This book provides novel accounts of three German-Jewish thinkers whose ideas, seminal to fields typically regarded as wildly unrelated, had common origins in debates about heresy between the wars.

Trade Review
Winner of the 2008 John Templeton Award for Theological Promise Co-Winner of the 2008 Best First Book in the History of Religions, American Academy of Religion "Elegant... Heresies, Lazier argues, represented an object of interest and inspiration. Yet his finely wrought analyses demonstrate that while all his subjects were indeed fascinated by the issues these heresies raised, they were less a source of inspiration than challenges in need of resistance, reworking, and overcoming."--Steven E. Aschheim, Times Literary Supplement "God Interrupted is intellectual history of a high order: eye-opening, skillfully wrought, rich in implication and touched with literary flair... [I]n writing of a pivotal moment in modern theology's history and its reverberations, he has not only made his case for its wide historical significance but also crafted a book that provoke those still struggling to determine the amplitude and frequency of the God's oft-interrupted call."--Robert Westbrook, Christian Century "[W]onderful, erudite, and beautifully written ... "--Anna Yeatman, H-Net "The brilliant scholar Benjamin Lazier makes a convincing case that two religious heresies exerted far-reaching influence on Weimar-era thought well beyond the confines of religion... Lazier navigates the eddies and tributaries of these intellectual currents with astonishing clarity, erudition, confidence, and wit. This book is a landmark, a tour de force of both synthesis and original thought."--Jewish Book World "What Commonweal readers would find most rewarding about ... Lazier's intellectual history is that [it] succeed[s] in giving a sense of the organic environment ... in which the philosopher's intellectual life was rooted and from which it richly sprang. For the same reason, Commonweal readers might also find [this] book somewhat disturbing, for [it] serve[s] as [a] reminder of a deep anti-Semitism that, as the recent controversy over Pope Benedict's rehabilitation of the Society of St. Pius X indicated, has not been entirely uprooted from Christianity to this day."--Bernard G. Prusak, Commonweal "It is quite the conceptual task to bring together these three seemingly disparate thinkers under a coherent conceptual roof. The way that the gnosticism-pantheism dialectic threads together these three thinkers is impressive. It is perhaps no surprise that Lazier received the 2008 Templeton Award for Theological Promise."--Clarence W. Joldersma, Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith "This rich and informative intellectual history is a compelling challenge to historians to take theology seriously by convincingly arguing for the importance of the theology of heresy ... for a comprehensive understanding of these three scholars' life and work... Grippingly persuasive."--Yotam Hotam, Journal of Modern History "This book is highly recommended for those who want to catch a theological-philosophical glimpse into the challenges faced by those who lived during the interwar period."--Wessel Bentley, Studia Historiae Ecclesiasticae

Table of Contents
Preface and Acknowledgments xi Introduction 1 Part One: Overcoming Gnosticism Chapter One: The Gnostic Return 27 Chapter Two: Romans in Weimar 37 Chapter Three: Overcoming Gnosticism 49 Chapter Four: After Auschwitz, Earth 60 Part Two: The Pantheism Controversy Chapter Five: Pantheism Revisited 73 Chapter Six: The Pantheism Controversy 93 Chapter Seven: From God to Nature 111 Chapter Eight: Natural Right and Judaism 127 Part Three: Redemption through Sin Chapter Nine: Redemption through Sin 139 Chapter Ten: Jewish Gnosticism 146 Chapter Eleven: Raising Pantheism 161 Chapter Twelve: From Nihilism to Nothingness 172 Chapter Thirteen: Scholem's Golem 191 Epilogue 201 Notes 205 Index 245

God Interrupted Heresy and the European

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A Paperback / softback by Benjamin Lazier

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    View other formats and editions of God Interrupted Heresy and the European by Benjamin Lazier

    Publisher: Princeton University Press
    Publication Date: 24/06/2012
    ISBN13: 9780691155418, 978-0691155418
    ISBN10: 0691155410

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Could the best thing about religion be the heresies it spawns? Leading intellectuals in interwar Europe thought so. This book provides novel accounts of three German-Jewish thinkers whose ideas, seminal to fields typically regarded as wildly unrelated, had common origins in debates about heresy between the wars.

    Trade Review
    Winner of the 2008 John Templeton Award for Theological Promise Co-Winner of the 2008 Best First Book in the History of Religions, American Academy of Religion "Elegant... Heresies, Lazier argues, represented an object of interest and inspiration. Yet his finely wrought analyses demonstrate that while all his subjects were indeed fascinated by the issues these heresies raised, they were less a source of inspiration than challenges in need of resistance, reworking, and overcoming."--Steven E. Aschheim, Times Literary Supplement "God Interrupted is intellectual history of a high order: eye-opening, skillfully wrought, rich in implication and touched with literary flair... [I]n writing of a pivotal moment in modern theology's history and its reverberations, he has not only made his case for its wide historical significance but also crafted a book that provoke those still struggling to determine the amplitude and frequency of the God's oft-interrupted call."--Robert Westbrook, Christian Century "[W]onderful, erudite, and beautifully written ... "--Anna Yeatman, H-Net "The brilliant scholar Benjamin Lazier makes a convincing case that two religious heresies exerted far-reaching influence on Weimar-era thought well beyond the confines of religion... Lazier navigates the eddies and tributaries of these intellectual currents with astonishing clarity, erudition, confidence, and wit. This book is a landmark, a tour de force of both synthesis and original thought."--Jewish Book World "What Commonweal readers would find most rewarding about ... Lazier's intellectual history is that [it] succeed[s] in giving a sense of the organic environment ... in which the philosopher's intellectual life was rooted and from which it richly sprang. For the same reason, Commonweal readers might also find [this] book somewhat disturbing, for [it] serve[s] as [a] reminder of a deep anti-Semitism that, as the recent controversy over Pope Benedict's rehabilitation of the Society of St. Pius X indicated, has not been entirely uprooted from Christianity to this day."--Bernard G. Prusak, Commonweal "It is quite the conceptual task to bring together these three seemingly disparate thinkers under a coherent conceptual roof. The way that the gnosticism-pantheism dialectic threads together these three thinkers is impressive. It is perhaps no surprise that Lazier received the 2008 Templeton Award for Theological Promise."--Clarence W. Joldersma, Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith "This rich and informative intellectual history is a compelling challenge to historians to take theology seriously by convincingly arguing for the importance of the theology of heresy ... for a comprehensive understanding of these three scholars' life and work... Grippingly persuasive."--Yotam Hotam, Journal of Modern History "This book is highly recommended for those who want to catch a theological-philosophical glimpse into the challenges faced by those who lived during the interwar period."--Wessel Bentley, Studia Historiae Ecclesiasticae

    Table of Contents
    Preface and Acknowledgments xi Introduction 1 Part One: Overcoming Gnosticism Chapter One: The Gnostic Return 27 Chapter Two: Romans in Weimar 37 Chapter Three: Overcoming Gnosticism 49 Chapter Four: After Auschwitz, Earth 60 Part Two: The Pantheism Controversy Chapter Five: Pantheism Revisited 73 Chapter Six: The Pantheism Controversy 93 Chapter Seven: From God to Nature 111 Chapter Eight: Natural Right and Judaism 127 Part Three: Redemption through Sin Chapter Nine: Redemption through Sin 139 Chapter Ten: Jewish Gnosticism 146 Chapter Eleven: Raising Pantheism 161 Chapter Twelve: From Nihilism to Nothingness 172 Chapter Thirteen: Scholem's Golem 191 Epilogue 201 Notes 205 Index 245

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