Hoping against hope Confessions of a postmodern pilgrim

John D. Caputo

Book - 2015

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Subjects
Published
Minneapolis : Fortress Press [2015]
Language
English
Main Author
John D. Caputo (-)
Physical Description
x, 214 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781451499155
  • Foreword
  • Chapter 1. Nihilism and the Smile on the Face of Matter
  • Jackie and Me
  • The Inhuman
  • Does Religion Offer Any Hope?
  • A Past That Was Never Present
  • Itinerary
  • Chapter 2. A Taste for the Mystics
  • The Rose Is without Why
  • The Conditional and the Unconditional
  • Where the Believers Are
  • Chapter 3. How Not to Give a Gift
  • Giving without Return
  • A Hitherto Lost Scroll
  • Mercy without Mercenaries
  • Chapter 4. Goodbye Heaven: The Religion of Marguerite and the Big Church
  • The Big Church and the Little Church
  • Quiet without Quietism
  • Chapter 5. Hello, Jesus: The Religion of Martha and the Working Church
  • Hospitality
  • Welcoming Congregations
  • Inter-Faith Dialogue
  • Faith without Beliefs, Hope without Assurance
  • Chapter 6. Adieu to God: Praying God to Rid Us of God
  • The Evidence of the Rose
  • God Does Not Exist, God Insists
  • Giving God a Chance
  • Interlude: A Short Nocturnal Seminar
  • Chapter 7. Guarding the Way to the Tree of Life: From Angelology to Technology
  • The Technological Option and the Tree of Life
  • Angels, Smart Phones, and the Future
  • Border Breakdowns and the Advent of the Inhuman
  • Monsters
  • Nowhere to Run
  • Chapter 8. Do We All Die? Everyone? Life before Death
  • Life before Death: Eschatology in a New Key
  • In What Can We Hope ?
  • Chapter 9. A Short Catechism on the Nihilism of Grace
  • Chapter 10. Conclusion: Dreaming, Praying, Hoping, Smiling
  • Dreaming
  • Praying
  • Hoping
  • Smiling
  • The End
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Philosopher Caputo (The Weakness of God) fulfills his duties as a self-appointed benevolent iconoclast by challenging believers about their images of God. Utilizing an interesting rhetorical device whereby he consults versions of his past life (known as Jackie and Brother Paul) Caputo attempts to save religion from itself by inviting the faithful to allow mystery to remain mysterious. Attempts to explain or anthropomorphize God have led some to a destructive theology whereby good deeds and avoiding sins are the only ways to achieve a relationship with the divine. Hospitality and love, he demands, are offered as pure gift; there is no why. These are not earned, nor are they dangled in front of us like a carrot for good behavior. The "nihilism of grace" is a phrase he uses to describe a postmodern sense of the utter gratuity of this gift. Caputo draws upon Christian mystics, such as Meister Eckhart, to aid his argument, and he does so convincingly, utilizing the wisdom of this spiritual tradition to forge new paths. For those not afraid to pause and take stock of their assumptions about religion and God's role in it, this work will greatly satisfy. (Oct.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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