"To the religious world that has long suffered the split of theology and spirituality, Gustafson offers a very original and very persuasive attempt to reunite the two in terms of a pansacramental approach, a liturgical mediation between the two, and presents, in the process, a wealth of insights from Aquinas, Rahner, Chauvet, Merton, Nicholas Black Elk, Dostoevsky, and Wendell Berry. ... I heartily recommend the book."
-Anselm K. Min, Professor of Religion, Department of Religion, Claremont Graduate University

"In this tour de force, Gustafson unleashes the deeper meanings of symbol and sacrament to reunite theological reflection and spiritual living. Deeply Christian and deeply interreligious, his pansacramentalism destabilizes traditional dichotomies and radically expands the realm of the sacred. A must-read for all who are interested in the future of constructive theology."
-Philip Clayton, author of Transforming Christian Theology

'We can be grateful for this important book, which not only raises the caution, but also offers a way of mediating the split between theology and spirituality. Additionally, Gustafson's pansacramentalism holds the potential to provide a theological foundation from which to fund inter-religious conversations, given its view that all things, including religions, are in God sacramentally.'
Khay Tham Nehemiah Lim, The Expository Times, Volume 129, Number 12, September 2018

Gustafson does an excellent job in presenting a well-researched and intriguing volume, spending extended time with the possible overlaps of Lakotah, Hindu, Jewish, and Catholic theology. Gustafson offers a thoughtful and intriguing argument about the possibility and practice of interreligious theology.
Micah Hogan,Theological Book Review online, January 2021

"provocative and wide-ranging"
Thomas Creedy, The Global Anglican, Autumn 2021

In Finding All Things In God, Hans Gustafson proposes pansacramentalism as holding the potential to find the divine in all things and all things in the divine. Such a proposition carries significant interreligious implications, particularly in the practice of theology. Presupposing theological practice as divorced from spirituality (lived religious experience), Gustafson presents pansacramentalism as a bridge between the two. In so doing, Gustafson offers a history of spirituality, sketching the foundations of a classical approach to sacramentality (through Aquinas) as well as a contemporary approach to the same (through Rahner and Chauvet). Through three fascinating case studies, this book presents particular instances of sacramentality in lived religious experience. Gustafson offers an exciting method of 'doing theology', one which is entirely compatible with the interdisciplinary field of interreligious studies.
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An enquiry into the role of pansacramentalism as a bridge between theology and spirituality and its implications for interreligious studies.
List of Figures Preface and Acknowledgments Introduction Part 1: "Tell Me Your Story" 1 "There's a Lot of Medicine in that Water" 2 Theology and Spirituality 3 Foundations of Sacramentality 4 The "Protestant Principle" and Sacramental Caution 5 A Rahnerian Pansacramental Proposal 6 Louis-Marie Chauvet: Beyond Aristotle and Aquinas Part 2: "Believing is Seeing" 7 Sacramental Spirituality 8 Thomas Merton: Sacramental Spirituality and Place 9 Nicholas Black Elk: Sacramental Spirituality and Descandalizing Multiple Religious Identity 10 Dostoevsky and Wendell Berry: Sacramental Spirituality and Literature Part 3: "Finding All Things in the Divine" 11 A Philosophy of Sacramental Mediation 12 Panentheism 13 Suffering in God and World 14 Towards a Pansacramental Theology of Religious Pluralism and Doing Theology Interreligiously Bibliography Name Index Subject Index
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780718894900
Publisert
1900
Utgiver
Vendor
Lutterworth Press
Vekt
521 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
153 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
356

Forfatter

Biographical note

Hans Gustafson is the associate director of the Jay Phillips Center for Interfaith Learning at the University of St. Thomas (Minnesota) and the College of Saint Benedict & Saint John's University (Minnesota) where he teaches in the theology departments.