Forbearance and Compulsion

Forbearance and Compulsion
Author: Maijastina Kahlos
Publsiher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 272
Release: 2009-06-25
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780715636985

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Most surveys of religious tolerance and intolerance start from the medieval and early modern period. This title widens the historical perspective to encompass late antiquity, examining ancient discussions of religious moderation and coercion in their historical contexts.

Constantine and the Divine Mind

Constantine and the Divine Mind
Author: Kegan A. Chandler
Publsiher: Wipf and Stock Publishers
Total Pages: 184
Release: 2019-12-18
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9781532689949

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Constantine's conversion to Christianity marks one of the most significant turning points in the epic of Western civilization. It is also one of history's most controversial and hotly-debated episodes. Why did Constantine join a persecuted sect? When did he convert? And what kind of Christian did he ultimately become? Such questions have perennially challenged historians, but modern scholarship has opened a new door towards understanding the fourth century's most famous and mysterious convert. In Constantine and the Divine Mind, Chandler offers a new portrait of Constantine as a deeply religious man on a quest to restore what he believed was once the original religion of mankind: monotheism. By tracing this theological quest and important historical trends in Roman paganism, Chandler illuminates the process by which Constantine embraced Christianity, and how the reasons for that embrace continued to manifest in his religious policies. In this we discover not only Constantine's personal religious journey, but the reason why Christianity was first developed into a world power.

Reconceiving Religious Conflict

Reconceiving Religious Conflict
Author: Wendy Mayer,Chris L. de Wet
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 303
Release: 2018-01-17
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781315387642

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Reconceiving Religious Conflict deconstructs instances of religious conflict within the formative centuries of Christianity, the first six centuries CE. It explores the theoretical foundations of religious conflict; the dynamics of religious conflict within the context of persecution and martyrdom; the social and moral intersections that undergird the phenomenon of religious conflict; and the relationship between religious conflict and religious identity. It is unique in that it does not solely focus on religious violence as it is physically manifested, but on religious conflict (and tolerance), looking too at dynamics of religious discourse and practice that often precede and accompany overt religious violence.

Spirit and the Obligation of Social Flesh

Spirit and the Obligation of Social Flesh
Author: Sharon V. Betcher
Publsiher: Fordham Univ Press
Total Pages: 312
Release: 2013-11-11
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780823253920

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Drawing on philosophical reflection, spiritual and religious values, and somatic practice, Spirit and the Obligation of Social Flesh offers guidance for moving amidst the affective dynamics that animate the streets of the global cities now amassing around our planet. Here theology turns decidedly secular. In urban medieval Europe, seculars were uncloistered persons who carried their spiritual passion and sense of an obligated life into daily circumambulations of the city. Seculars lived in the city, on behalf of the city, but—contrary to the new profit economy of the time—with a different locus of value: spirit. Betcher argues that for seculars today the possibility of a devoted life, the practice of felicity in history, still remains. Spirit now names a necessary “prosthesis,” a locus for regenerating the elemental commons of our interdependent flesh and thus for cultivating spacious and fearless empathy, forbearance, and generosity. Her theological poetics, though based in Christianity, are frequently in conversation with other religions resident in our postcolonial cities.

Recognition and Religion

Recognition and Religion
Author: Maijastina Kahlos,Heikki J. Koskinen,Ritva Palmén
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2019-03-01
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780429649387

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This book focuses on recognition and its relation to religion and theology, in both systematic and historical dimensions. While existing research literature on recognition and contemporary recognition theory has been gradually growing since the early 1990s, certain gaps remain in the field covered so far. One of these is the multifaceted interaction between the phenomena of recognition and religion. Since recognition applies to persons, institutions, and normative entities like systems of beliefs, it also provides a very useful analytic and interpretative tool for studying religion. Divided into five sections, with chapters written by established scholars in their respective fields, the book explores the roots, history, and limits of recognition theory in the context of religious belief. Exploring early Christian and medieval sources on recognition and religion, it also offers contemporary applications of this underexplored combination. This is a timely book, as debates over religious identities, problematic forms of extremism and societal issues related with multiculturalism continue to dominate the media and politics. It will, therefore, be of great interest to scholars of recognition studies as well as religious studies, theology, philosophy, and religious and intellectual history.

Athens and Jerusalem

Athens and Jerusalem
Author: Winfried Schröder
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 257
Release: 2022-12-12
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 9789004536135

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A comparative analysis of the objections raised against Christianity by late antique philosophers (Celsus, Porphyry, and Julian the Apostate) and Enlightenment freethinkers, focusing on discussions concerning the Bible, the concept of faith, religious coercion, miracles, and morality.

Continuity and Discontinuity in Early Christian Apologetics

Continuity and Discontinuity in Early Christian Apologetics
Author: Jörg Ulrich,Anders-Christian Jacobsen,Maijastina Kahlos
Publsiher: Peter Lang
Total Pages: 140
Release: 2009
Genre: Apologetics
ISBN: 3631579764

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This book contains the contributions to a workshop on apologetics in early Christianity which took place at the Fifteenth International Conference on Patristic Studies in Oxford in the summer of 2007. The workshop was arranged by scholars from Germany, Finland and Denmark who had for some time worked together in a project on early Christian apologetics. The aim of the workshop was thus to present and discuss some of the results and still unsolved problems which arose from this project. The book presents the contributions to the workshop. Hereby the editors hope to reach a larger audience and thus to be able to further the discussion of the topic of early Christian apologetics.

Injury and Injustice

Injury and Injustice
Author: Anne Bloom,David M. Engel,Michael McCann
Publsiher: Cambridge Studies in Law and Society
Total Pages: 403
Release: 2018-03-15
Genre: Law
ISBN: 9781108420242

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Explores the inescapable experience of injury and its implications for social inequality in different cultural settings.