Christ and Revelatory Community in Bonhoeffer's Reception of Hegel
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Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Tübingen :
Mohr Siebeck,
2018.
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Series: | Dogmatik in der Moderne.
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Online Access: | Connect to this title online (unlimited simultaneous users allowed; 325 uses per year) |
Table of Contents:
- Intro; Acknowledgements; Table of Contents; Introduction; A. Juxtaposing Monuments; B. From Disruptive Word to Revelatory Community; C. Ferment of the Mind: Textual Reception and its Matrices; D. From Theology to Philosophy
- and Back Again; E. Beyond Revolt: A Case for 'Eclectic' Reception; F. Scholarship on Bonhoeffer's Reception of Hegel; G. Chapter Outline; Part One
- Beyond the Incurvature of the Self; Chapter 1: From Word to Geist: Revelation Becomes the Community; A. Geist and the External Word; I. Shapes of Geist in Hegel; II. Bonhoeffer's Appropriation of 'Objective Geist'
- III. Recovering the Word Before GeistB. Revelation and Hiddenness in History; I. Hegel on the Unfolding of Revelation; II. Bonhoeffer on 'Revelation in Hiddenness'; C. From 'Self-Confinement' to Reciprocal Confession in Hegel; I. Confessions of the Beautiful Soul; II. Knowledge of the Appearing God; D. Bonhoeffer's Turn to Intercession; I. Confessions of the Privately Virtuous
- and 'Confessing' Church; II. Constitutive Intercession and the Simultaneity of Sin; E. 'Suspending' Reflection in Act and Being?; F. Conclusion; Chapter 2: A Cleaving Mind: The Fall into Knowledge
- A. To Break and to Bind: Relating the Two LecturersI. Biblical Evocations in Hegel's Thought; II. Bonhoeffer's Criticism of Hegel's 'Divine Knowledge'; B. Similar Depictions of the 'Fallen' Mind; I. Hegel on the Reflexive Division of Judgement; II. Bonhoeffer on the Presumptuous 'Creator-Human'; C. Divergence over Protology; I. Hegel on Primal Volatility; II. Bonhoeffer on Original Unity; D. The Politics of Knowing: Supersession from Scripture to Culture; I. Hegel on the Primal State of Others; II. Bonhoeffer on 'Our' Urgeschichte; E. A 'Sublation' of Ethics?; F. Conclusion
- Part Two
- The Substitution of ChristChapter 3: Disruption of the Word: Christ as Counter-Logos; A. Idea and Appearance: A Classification that Divides?; I. Hegel on the Relation of Idea and Appearance; II. Noli me tangere: Hegel on Christ's Departure; III. Bonhoeffer's Charge of Docetism; B. Hegel's 'Trinitarian' Logic; I. The Passing of the Son's 'Other-Being'; II. 'Geist or God'? Suspicions of Pantheism; C. Bonhoeffer's Account of the Whole and Present Christ; I. Christology from an sich to pro nobis; II. Resisting Rational 'Necessity'; D. Christ Against Reason?
- I. Logos as Inception of Hegel's PhilosophyII. Bonhoeffer's Menschenlogos-Gegenlogos Dialectic; III. Thinking After Confrontation: Toward a Christological Logic; E. The 'Christ-Reality' and the Unities of Thought; F. Conclusion; Chapter 4: That Insistent Est: Christ as Preaching and Sacrament; A. Reformed-Lutheran Debates in the 1920s; I. Karl Barth's Criticism of the 'Predicate of Identity'; II. Franz Hildebrandt's Defence of the Est; B. Christ as Doctrine, Christ as Address; I. Hegel on the Doctrinal Construction of Community; II. Bonhoeffer on the Present Address of Preaching