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Radler examines Bonhoeffer’s and Schmitt’s intellectual paradigms of thought of theology and jurisprudence. Whilst both thinkers encounter constitutional institutional models, they arrive at opposing conclusions and actions. This book tackles how they approach the indicators for a decision of choices between alternatives, the urgency of resolving the problems at hand, the intended goal, and the following active manifestation in Christ.Radler reveals how Schmitt's form of Dezision, resting on a linear model of history, abstracts metaphysical content from objective normative evaluation and, in support of a human personality representing the idea of Christ, elevates the significance of the self over content and subject in structural analogy to theological dogma. On the other hand, Bonhoeffer's theology repudiates Schmitt's political-jurisprudential position, contesting that history ultimately focuses on leading to human wholeness through reconciliation.
Karola Radler is a retired German judge and Research Associate in Systematic Theology at the University of Stellenbosch, South Africa.
PrefaceIntroduction: The Scope of the Question of “Decision”Chapter 1The “Weimar” Context: Between Ideology and ConfessionChapter 2The Krisis: A Conceptual Problem for DecisionChapter 3The Decision: The Ent-Scheidung's Structural NotionsDecision as Forced Unity or Reconciled Wholeness? Afterword: “Who are you?”BibliographyPerson IndexSubject Index
Radler’s work on Bonhoeffer and Schmitt offers a timely and groundbreaking contribution. As a native German speaker, with dual expertise in theology and jurisprudence, she illuminates subtle and important elements to Bonhoeffer’s critical engagement with Schmitt’s notion of Dezision. This book is a must-read for scholars of Bonhoeffer, Schmitt, and persons working in political theology.