Religion and the Human in the Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s Christianity [PDF]
Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s name is associated with serious changes in the life of Western society in the second half of the twentieth century. Pastor Bonhoeffer was not afraid to go far in his statements.
Nyrkov A.
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Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s “Religionless Christianity”: Secular and Divine [PDF]
Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s “Religionless Christianity” brought its author a scandal- ous reputation. Bonhoeffer’s name is associated with serious changes in the life of Western society in the second half of the twentieth century.
Nyrkov A.
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Różewicz and Bonhoeffer. On the Margin of the Poem Learning to Walk by Tadeusz Różewicz [PDF]
The departure point of the analysis presented in this article is a poem written by Tadeusz Różewicz learning to walk (nauka chodzenia). The protagonist of the poem is Dietrich Bonhoeffer, who created the theory of “religionless Christianity”.
Przemysław Dakowicz
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Religionless Christianity and the political implications of theological speech: What Bonhoeffer’s theology yields to a world of fundamentalisms [PDF]
This is the author's PDF preprint of an article published in International Journal of Systematic Theology© 2009. The definitive version is available at www3.interscience.wiley.comThis article seeks to utilise Bonhoeffer’s religionless Christianity in a ...
Greggs, Tom
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A Christian Pluralistic Hypothesis: To Bonhoeffer and beyond—A World Christianity
This essay investigates Bonhoeffer’s undeveloped concept of “Unconscious Christianity” and how a protracted understanding of his religionless Christianity in a culture “come of age” points to a viable Christian pluralistic hypothesis—how Christ and the ...
Greg Gorsuch
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A teleological interpretation of Bonhoeffer's concept of “A World Come of Age”
Abstract This paper explores Dietrich Bonhoeffer's concept of “the nonreligious interpretation of biblical terms in a world come of age,” best known from his Letters and Papers from Prison (LPP). As a case study of its possibilities, we will survey South African thinkers who have explored the concept in rapidly changing contexts.
Paul Dankers, Christian W. Willerton
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Militant Liturgies: Practicing Christianity with Kierkegaard, Bonhoeffer, and Weil
Traditional philosophy of religion has tended to focus on the doxastic dimension of religious life, which although a vitally important area of research, has often come at the cost of philosophical engagements with religious practice.
J. Aaron Simmons
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The Political vs. the Theological: The Scope of Secularity in Arendtian Forgiveness
ABSTRACT The conventional interpretation of Hannah Arendt's accounts of forgiveness considers them secularistic. The secular features of her thinking that resist grounding the act of forgiving in divine criteria offer a good corrective to religious forgiveness that fosters depoliticization. Arendt's vision of free politics, however, calls for much more
Shinkyu Lee
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Navigating ethics in a pandemic—Contempt for the weak versus love of neighbor in a Swedish lens
Abstract The article draws on the author's observations and reflections about Sweden's pandemic management from February 2020 to June 2021. It does not simply interpret the lessons one can learn from the Swedish biopolitical experiment, but focuses on some central ethical challenges that every nation had to face in an accelerating pandemic.
Sigurd Bergmann
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Exchange, Atonement, and Recovered Humanity: Martin Luther on the Passive Obedience of Christ
Abstract This article engages Luther’s doctrine of Christ’s passive obedience (obedientia passiva)––a theme that comes to fullest expression in his Lectures on Galatians (1531/5). There, Luther argues that the sins of the godless become the true possession of the vicariously suffering Son.
John W. Hoyum
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