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This Is the Night: Suffering, Salvation, and the Liturgies of Holy Week

Autor James W. Farwell
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 28 feb 2005
This Is the Night is a work of "liturgical theology," understood as a theology inspired or informed by the liturgies of Christian Holy Week. In the context of modernity in crisis, it is an attempt to think with the principal liturgies of the "PaschalTriduum" - Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and the Great Vigil of Easter - about human suffering.The author works from an analysis of the structure of the Christian paschal liturgies to offer an account of suffering that is more compassionate and honest than that of western modernity. Moreover, this account is the theoretical correlate of an ethic performed by the paschal liturgies: their structure and rhythm give rise not only to an account of suffering and its remedy, but to a compassionate practice into which Christians are called.In both the philosophical and the popular imagination, modernity is a context in which "progress" is the defining human telos. Because of this commitment to progress, modernity is often allergic to the concrete pain and horror of suffering. Modernity sidelines suffering as an unfortunate but necessary moment in the course of human progress, not infrequently because it is a byproduct of our "progress" - our technical mastery of nature and leadership of global capitalization. In this context, suffering is more a concept than an existential fact or experience. Yet downplaying human suffering in this way creates even greater suffering, by anesthetizing us to its effect on human beings.Some of the critics of modernity also criticize Christianity as a religious version of the modern myth ofprogress, or even as its very source. Inspired in part by the political theology of Johann Metz and by theliturgical scholarship of Don Saliers, Robert Taft, and others, the author argues instead that in the liturgiesof Holy Week, the passion, death, and resurrection of Christ form a context in which Christians recognizehuman suffering not as an unfortunate moment on the way to salvation but as the very field of God's savingactivity. That divine activity is saving precisely as we enter into it by practice. To be saved - to enter intoan abundant and vigorous human life - is to become a priestly people, orienting ourselves toward sufferingin the same way that Jesus Christ did, facing it with courage where necessary and resisting its ravageswhere possible.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780567027603
ISBN-10: 0567027600
Pagini: 200
Dimensiuni: 154 x 229 x 12 mm
Greutate: 0.33 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția T&T Clark
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Recenzii

"This is the Night is a groundbreaking work of liturgical theology....Farwell...has thoroughly researched the history of Holy Week and generated keen insights from both the ritual actions of the earliest Christians as well as from current scholarship in light of the theme of suffering.... Everyone interested in the depth of the theological underpinnings of the Holy Week liturgies will want to read this book." -The Living Church, 3/20/05
"This is an important book... it will reward careful study and make you think"   ANVIL 23.4 2006
"James Farwell has created a masterful work of constructive theology. He has placed in creative dialogue the ancient and reformed liturgies of the Paschal Triduum and the problem of human suffering, explored through the lens of cutting-edge philosophy, ritual studies, and sacramental theology. Farwell shows a deep respect for the tradition and a powerful ability to explore its depth with provocative questions and fresh insights. A valuable book!" -The Right Reverend J. Neil Alexander, ThD, DD, Bishop of Atlanta
But the Holy Week rites have an importance that goes beyond their historical richness or their relevance for the Episcopal Church's baptismal focus, and James Farwell's excellent book This is the Night: Suffering, Salvation, and the Liturgies of the Holy Week opens up the theological riches of the Holy Week rites for a postmodern cultural context... essential reading for those who will minister in a postmodern cultural context or in a place where humans suffer- in short, for all clergy, everywhere."- Sewanee Theological Review, Easter 2006 issue