人类的痛苦与上帝的大能

IF 0.7 0 RELIGION
R. Hunter
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引用次数: 0

摘要

耶鲁神学院威格尔神学荣誉退休教授大卫·凯尔西在这本具有挑战性和重要意义的书中谈到了一个极其重要但很少被讨论的问题:如何反驳糟糕的神学——他更礼貌地称之为“有问题的神学”——当人们遭受可怕的邪恶和悲剧时,虔诚的照顾者试图用神学的说法来安慰他们,比如:这是上帝的意愿,或者发生这样的事件是有原因的,或者它们是神圣计划的一部分,或者“上帝永远不会让你承受更多的痛苦。”凯尔西认为,这种溴化物可能是“传统智慧的陈词滥调”,但它们大错特错。错了,因为他们歪曲了上帝是谁和什么,以及上帝是如何与世界联系在一起的。因此,他对这些主张的反对首先不是心理上的。问题更深层,在于他们背后的“有问题的神学”。《人类的痛苦与上帝的力量》是对一个好的(或更好的)神学可能包含的内容的延伸阐述,可以说,这一神学更深刻地符合《圣经》和基督教信仰的核心神学主旨,也更尊重和真实地对待人类经验。这本书还展示了为什么流行的(如果有问题的话)对事物的描述是行不通的。凯尔西是作为一个系统的神学家而不是作为一个实践或田园神学家写作的。但是,尽管他的思想在各个方面都接近于田园神学的牧场,但这本书的真正价值在于它对这些困难的照顾情况下的神学思想和见解的坚定凝视。他的思想不仅对田园和其他护理实践,而且对田园神学的学术学科都有深刻的、实际上是反直觉的影响。自由派牧神学家尤其会发现,这本书既是一本极具创新性和创造性的智力著作,也是对牧神神学中公认的自由派神学假设和观点的一次令人振奋的、也许令人不安的挑战。无论如何,它的方法论(如果不是神学的话)是广泛保守的,植根于对圣经和教会主流神学传统的认同,尤其是改革派传统(尽管它也以惊人的方式偏离了传统神学)。注:这本书与凯尔西的其他作品并驾齐驱,尤其是他的代表作《古怪的存在:神学人类学》(两卷),这本书可以用来填补《人类的痛苦》和《上帝的力量》中出现的许多空白。凯尔西的小册子《想象救赎》可读性强得多,也为《人类的痛苦》提供了一个有用的补充,它也可以成为帮助澄清凯尔西思想的有用伴侣。我将在下文中指出其中一些补充位置。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Human Anguish and God’s Power
David Kelsey, Weigle Professor Emeritus of Theology at Yale Divinity School, takes up an enormously important and seldom-discussed problem in this challenging and important book: how to refute the bad theology—what he calls, more politely, ‘problematic theology’—that frequently crops up when people suffer horrendous evils and tragedies, and when well-intentioned, pious caregivers try to console them with theological claims like: it’s God’s will, or there is a reason such events have happened, or they are part of a divine plan, or ‘God never sends more suffering than you can bear.’ Such bromides may be ‘the platitudes of conventional wisdom,’ but they are profoundly wrong, according to Kelsey. Wrong because they misrepresent who and what God is and how God is related to the world. His objections to these claims are not, therefore, in the first instance, psychological. The problem lies deeper, in the ‘problematic theology’ that lies behind them. Human Anguish and God’s Power is an extended exposition of what a good (or better) theology could entail, one that, arguably, more profoundly fits the central theological thrust of the Bible and Christian faith and is also more respecting of and true to human experience. The book also shows why the popular, if problematic, account of things just won’t do. Kelsey writes as a systematic theologian, not as a practical or pastoral theologian. But though his thinking verges into pastoral theological pastures at various points, the true value of this book is its steady gaze at the theological ideas and insights underlying these difficult caregiving situations. His ideas have profound and actually counter intuitive implications not only for pastoral and other caregiving practices, but for the academic discipline of pastoral theology as well. Liberal pastoral theologians in particular will find this book both a highly innovative and creative intellectual work, but also a bracing and perhaps disturbing challenge to well-established liberal theological assumptions and perspectives in pastoral theology. It is, in any event, broadly conservative in its methodology if not in its theology, being rooted in an identification with the scriptures and much of the mainstream theological tradition of the church, especially perhaps the Reformed tradition (though it also departs from traditional theology in striking ways). Note: This book stands alongside Kelsey’s other works, especially his magnum opus, Eccentric Existence: A Theological Anthropology (two volumes), which can be usefully read to fill in many blanks that arise in Human Anguish and God’s Power. Kelsey’s little volume, Imagining Redemption, which is far more readable and also provides a helpful adjunct to Human Anguish, can also be a useful companion in helping to clarify Kelsey’s thinking. I will point out some of these supplemental places in what follows.
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