Give us today our daily bread: towards a phenomenological theology of embodied finitude

IF 0.4 0 RELIGION
Jeremy Heuslein
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACT In order to develop a phenomenological theology of embodied finitude, I first turn to the not-uncontroversial concept of kenosis. Drawing on the kenosis hymn in Philippians 2, as well as feminist and Eastern Orthodox thought, I argue for a relational understanding of kenosis that does not correspond to the conventional ‘self-emptying’ of kenotic theology. This is, in part, due to the experience of embodiment, which I turn to in my second section. Drawing upon phenomenological resources to articulate the nature of the embodiment as flesh, I argue that the intersubjective and interrelated constitution of the flesh grounds an understanding of kenosis and begins to articulate what embodied finitude is. I bring into this conversation the notion of ‘deep incarnation’, which reveals one of the depths of finitude: bodily need. In my final section, I explicate a reading of the Lord’s Prayer as part of a spirituality that embraces embodied finitude and incarnate need. Here, I distinguish between need and desire, with relational kenosis aiming at plerosis, that is, human flourishing as love.
今天赐给我们日用的食粮:走向具身有限性的现象学神学
摘要为了发展一种具身有限性的现象学神学,我首先转向了无争议的kenosis概念。根据《腓立比书2》中的克诺西赞美诗,以及女权主义和东正教思想,我主张对克诺西的关系理解与克诺西神学的传统“自我清空”不符。这在一定程度上是由于化身的经验,我在第二节中谈到了这一点。利用现象学资源来阐明化身作为肉体的本质,我认为,肉体的主体间和相互关联的构成奠定了对kenosis的理解,并开始阐明化身的有限性是什么。我在这场对话中引入了“深度化身”的概念,它揭示了有限性的深度之一:身体需求。在我的最后一节中,我解释了主祷文的解读,它是包含具体有限性和具体需要的精神的一部分。在这里,我区分了需要和欲望,关系的本质是为了弥补,即人类像爱一样繁荣。
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来源期刊
Practical Theology
Practical Theology RELIGION-
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
25.00%
发文量
79
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