Description

Book Synopsis


Table of Contents

Translator’s Introduction

Author’s Foreword

Chapter I: Disposing of three trios
I. Three monotheisms?
1. Monotheism is not essentially religious
2. There are not only three monotheisms
3. Do monotheism and polytheism simply
oppose one another?
4. The real question
5. Islamic monotheism
6. A mutual recognition of the
monotheisms?
II. Three religions of Abraham?
Common personages
1. The same Abraham?
2. Three religions of Abraham, or only one?
III. Three religions of the book?
1. A deceptive expression
2. Three very different books
3. Three relations to the book
4. The idea of revelation
IV. Three religions?
1. How do the three religions distinguish
themselves from one another?
2. Three books?
Conclusion

Chapter 2: To know God
I. To know
1. What does “to know” mean?
2. To know the singular
3. Self-knowledge, personal knowledge,
knowledge of God
4. To look in the right place
II. A particular object
1. “Open your eye, the good one!”
2. Faith and knowledge
3. To know a paradoxical object
4. Faith, will, love

Chapter 3: The one God
I. Oneness
1. The dangers of monotheism
2. The rediscovery of polytheism
3. The dogma of the Trinity and political
theology
II. Unity
1. “Monotheism”: a vague concept
2. Uniqueness and unity
3. The concrete problem
III. Union: the human model
1. The bond of charity
2. Love and identity
3. To accept the other as other
IV. Union: the Trinitarian model
1. Relation
2. To give rise to the other
Conclusion: United to the one God?

Chapter 4: God the Father
1. Sexuality and the image of God
2. Masculinity and virility
3. Creation and paternity
4. Uncoupling paternity and virility
Conclusion

Chapter 5: A God who has said everything
I. Nothing more to say
1. Power, or the word
2. A stingy grace?
3. The definitive religion
4. A God reduced to silence
5. The discourse of the God who is mute
II. The silence of the flesh
1. Who wants more, really wants less
2. Without return
3. The incarnate Word
4. The Trinity
III. After Everything
1. What to do when everything is said?
2. The word now belongs to us
3. A general rule
Conclusion

Chapter 6: A God who asks nothing of us
I. I know what to do
1. The amplitude of the normative
2. What does God ask?
3. The end of the Law
II. God’s expectation
1. The vegetal model
2. The Old Testament
3. The New Testament
III. Responding to the expectation
1. To eat
2. Faith
3. Pride and humility
4. Sacrifice
Conclusion: The “meaning of life”

Chapter 7: A God who forgives sins
I. A few clarifications
1. Sin and pleasure
2. Offending God?
3. Sin presupposes forgiveness
II. My sin
1. Where is evil?
2. “For every sin, mercy”
3. Remission
Conclusion

Index

On the God of the Christians – (and on one or two

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    A Hardback by Rémi Brague, Paul Seaton

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      Publisher: St Augustine's Press
      Publication Date: 14/06/2013
      ISBN13: 9781587313455, 978-1587313455
      ISBN10: 1587313456

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Table of Contents

      Translator’s Introduction

      Author’s Foreword

      Chapter I: Disposing of three trios
      I. Three monotheisms?
      1. Monotheism is not essentially religious
      2. There are not only three monotheisms
      3. Do monotheism and polytheism simply
      oppose one another?
      4. The real question
      5. Islamic monotheism
      6. A mutual recognition of the
      monotheisms?
      II. Three religions of Abraham?
      Common personages
      1. The same Abraham?
      2. Three religions of Abraham, or only one?
      III. Three religions of the book?
      1. A deceptive expression
      2. Three very different books
      3. Three relations to the book
      4. The idea of revelation
      IV. Three religions?
      1. How do the three religions distinguish
      themselves from one another?
      2. Three books?
      Conclusion

      Chapter 2: To know God
      I. To know
      1. What does “to know” mean?
      2. To know the singular
      3. Self-knowledge, personal knowledge,
      knowledge of God
      4. To look in the right place
      II. A particular object
      1. “Open your eye, the good one!”
      2. Faith and knowledge
      3. To know a paradoxical object
      4. Faith, will, love

      Chapter 3: The one God
      I. Oneness
      1. The dangers of monotheism
      2. The rediscovery of polytheism
      3. The dogma of the Trinity and political
      theology
      II. Unity
      1. “Monotheism”: a vague concept
      2. Uniqueness and unity
      3. The concrete problem
      III. Union: the human model
      1. The bond of charity
      2. Love and identity
      3. To accept the other as other
      IV. Union: the Trinitarian model
      1. Relation
      2. To give rise to the other
      Conclusion: United to the one God?

      Chapter 4: God the Father
      1. Sexuality and the image of God
      2. Masculinity and virility
      3. Creation and paternity
      4. Uncoupling paternity and virility
      Conclusion

      Chapter 5: A God who has said everything
      I. Nothing more to say
      1. Power, or the word
      2. A stingy grace?
      3. The definitive religion
      4. A God reduced to silence
      5. The discourse of the God who is mute
      II. The silence of the flesh
      1. Who wants more, really wants less
      2. Without return
      3. The incarnate Word
      4. The Trinity
      III. After Everything
      1. What to do when everything is said?
      2. The word now belongs to us
      3. A general rule
      Conclusion

      Chapter 6: A God who asks nothing of us
      I. I know what to do
      1. The amplitude of the normative
      2. What does God ask?
      3. The end of the Law
      II. God’s expectation
      1. The vegetal model
      2. The Old Testament
      3. The New Testament
      III. Responding to the expectation
      1. To eat
      2. Faith
      3. Pride and humility
      4. Sacrifice
      Conclusion: The “meaning of life”

      Chapter 7: A God who forgives sins
      I. A few clarifications
      1. Sin and pleasure
      2. Offending God?
      3. Sin presupposes forgiveness
      II. My sin
      1. Where is evil?
      2. “For every sin, mercy”
      3. Remission
      Conclusion

      Index

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