Del 11 i serien Studies in Systematic Theology
Pneumatology and the Christian-Buddhist Dialogue
Does the Spirit Blow through the Middle Way?
3 719 kr
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Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2012-07-26
- Mått155 x 235 x 23 mm
- Vikt1 400 g
- FormatInbunden
- SpråkEngelska
- SerieStudies in Systematic Theology
- Antal sidor302
- FörlagBrill
- ISBN9789004231177
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Amos Yong, Ph.D. (1998) Systematic Theology, Boston University, is J. Rodman Williams Professor of Theology at Regent University School of Divinity, and the author/editor of many books, including The Cosmic Breath: Spirit and Nature in the Christianity-Buddhism-Science Trialogue (Brill, 2012).
- PrefaceAcknowledgmentsChapter 1 – Introduction: Christian Theology Entering the Middle Way1.1 The Christian Encounter with Buddhism: Whence and Whither1.2 Starting with the Spirit: Methodological Issues and the Interfaith Encounter1.2.1 Pneumatology and Interreligious Engagement1.2.2 Pneumatology and Interreligious Witness1.2.3 Pneumatology and Comparative Theology1.3 An Overview of the BookPart I – Spirit and Emptiness: Divine Presence, Human Nature, and the Middle WayChapter 2 – Spirit, Creation, and Human Nature: Divine Presence in Pneumatological Perspective2.1 Spirit and Creation in the Genesis Narrative2.2 Spirit, Mind, Body and the Neurosciences2.3 Spirit and the World: Rethinking Divine PresenceChapter 3 – Shunyata: The World and Becoming Human in East Asian Buddhism3.1 Anatman and Shunyata in Early Buddhist Traditions3.2 Shunyata, Human Nature, and the Neurosciences3.3 Pratityasamutpada, the Human Person and InterrelationalityChapter 4 – Toward a Comparative Christian-Buddhist Anthropology 4.1 Pneuma and Shunyata: On Human Being and Becoming4.2 Interpreting the Human: Pneumato-christological Perspectives4.3 Method in Science and Religion: A Pneumatological Assist Part II – Spirit, Salvation, and the Eightfold Path: Divine Activity and Liberation along the Middle Way Chapter 5 – Becoming Divine: Eastern Orthodoxy and the Desert Tradition of Spirituality5.1 The Spirituality of the Desert5.2 The Desert Path and the Psycho-Dynamics of Liberation in the Philokalia5.2.1 The Way of the Desert and the Mortification of the Flesh5.2.1 Spiritual Warfare and the Illumination of the Mind5.2.3 Deification and the Hesychast Stillness of Heart5.3 The Jesus Prayer and the Journey to GodChapter 6 – Perfection and Liberation: Buddhaghosa and the Theravadin Tradition of Self-Renunciation6.1 The Theravadin Arahant6.2 The Path of the Arahant and the Psycho-Dynamics of Liberation in Buddhaghosa’s Visuddhimagga6.2.1 Sila and the Purification of Virtue6.2.2 Samadhi and the Purification of Conciousness6.2.3 Panna and the Perfection of the Arahant6.3 Renunciation and Theravadin Buddhist PerfectionChapter 7 – Toward a Comparative Christian-Buddhist Soteriology7.1 A Phenomenology of Deification and Perfection7.2 The Psychology and Epistemology of Liberation7.3 Salvation: Pneumatological and Buddhological Comparisons and ContrastsPart III – The Satan and Mara: Divine Absence and the Demonic Threatening the Middle WayChapter 8 – Pentecostal Demonologies and the Asian Context8.1 Christian Traditions and the Demonic8.2 Pentecostal Theologies of the Demonic8.3 Exorcising the DemonicChapter 9 – Buddhist Traditions of the Demonic9.1 Textual and Doctrinal Perspectives on Buddhist Demonologies9.2 The Praxis of Buddhist Exorcisms9.3 Toward a Buddhist Hermeneutics of the DemonicChapter 10 – Toward a Comparative Christian-Buddhist Cosmology10.1 From a Phenomenology to a Cosmology and Soteriology of the Demonic10.2 Interpreting the Demonic: A Cross-cultural and Interreligious Understanding 10.3 Toward a Christian Discernment of Spirit(s) “after” BuddhismChapter 11 – Conclusion: Skillful Means and the Transformation of the Middle Way11.1 Summaries11.2 Discerning the Spirit “after” Buddhism11.2.1 Discerning the Spirit and the Word11.2.2 Discerning the Spirit of Jesus11.2.3 Discerning the Spirit of Salvation11.3 Whither Christian Theology and the Middle Way? Implications for Christian PracticesName IndexSubject Index
This is a brave and passionate book, clearly written and meticulously researched. Seeking faithfulness to Christianity and respect for Buddhism’s integrity, and using pneumatological categories as inspiration, Yong brings pneuma (Spirit), hesychast stillness and pentecostal demonology into dialogue with śūnyatā (emptiness), Buddhaghosa’s Visuddhimagga and Buddhist exorcism, in an act of creative and rigorous Christian theology. Differences are not hidden. Similarities are not forced. But numerous touching points between the two religions arise, fertile with theological implication. Neither religion can remain unperturbed after this book. It will become a benchmark for a theology that seeks transformation through the religious ‘other’. Elizabeth Harris, Senior Lecturer in Comparative Study of Religions, Liverpool Hope University, and President of the European Network of Buddhist-Christian Studies. Amos Yong has given us a sterling example of how to do theology comparatively. The scope of this book is ambitious, ranging from desert spirituality to demonology. For all its impressive erudition, the book is rooted in Yong’s personal journey of faith from a closed-minded view of anyone outside his Pentecostal community to a realization that the lives of those who follow other religious paths can inspire Christians to embrace their own faith in new ways. A valuable book, highly recommended. James L. Fredericks, Professor of Theological Studies, Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles. Amos Yong's Pneumatology and the Christian‐Buddhist Dialogue is an impressive exercise in comparative theology (...). It establishes sensible grounds for a productive Christian‐Buddhist encounter, provides signposts for future ventures and helps to eliminate misconceptions about Buddhism and Pentecostalism. The work may well challenge the reader in quite unexpected ways and perhaps even increase her commitment to her own faith tradition.Anita C. Ray in Australian eJournal of TheologyThere is not, to my knowledge, another current example of comparative theology that is as constructive, not to mention theologically responsible and dialogical, as what this volume offers. The book’s second section in particular would be invaluable for graduate students and scholars as an example of active, constructive, fair-minded comparative theology. For demonstrating how the work ought to be done, and as a partner in theological conversation along the way, Amos Yong again proves himself cutting-edge.Samuel J. Young in American Theological InquiryYong's book, in its sophisticated reflections on methodology and attention to detail and diversity of traditions, represents some of the best current work in comparative theology. He shows each of us how our own religious worlds may be enriched and expanded through a thoughtful encounter with religious others. This book is a major contribution to Buddhist-Christian learning, to methodology in comparative theology, and to every religious tradition's ongoing effort to discern its most authentic response to the pluralistic world of the twenty-first century.John Makransky Associate Professor of Buddhism and Comparative Theology at Boston College, in Pneuma 36: 1 (2014). Yong's book is a comprehensive and very intriguing study into Christian-Buddhist encounter, comparative theology and interreligious dialogue. [...] His discussion contributes to and opens up for further discussion and theological exploration of what the Christian message means in our contemporary world. [...] I would like to commend Yong for the fact that he compares and discusses various Christian and Buddhist traditions. All too often, one talks about Christian-Buddhist dialogue in a way that gives the impression that we are talking about the encounter between two homogenous traditions. Kari Storstein Haug School of Mission and Theology, Stavanger, Norway in Exchange 43: 1 (2014)
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