Seeing the World and Knowing God
Hebrew Wisdom and Christian Doctrine in a Late-Modern Context
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:18th Dec '14
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This book aims to create a Christian theology of wisdom for the present day, in discussion with two sets of conversation-partners. The first are writers of the 'wisdom literature' in ancient Israel and the Jewish community in Alexandria. Here, special attention is given to the biblical books of Proverbs, Job, and Ecclesiastes. The second conversation-partners are philosophers and thinkers of the late-modern age, among them Jacques Derrida, Emmanuel Levinas, Julia Kristeva, Paul Ricoeur, and Hannah Arendt. In the late-modern period there has been a reaction against an inherited conception of the conscious and rational self as mastering and even subjugating the world around, and there has been an attempt to overcome the consequent split between the subject and objects of observation. Paul S. Fiddes enters into dialogue with these late-modern concerns about the relation between the self and the world, proposing that the wisdom which is indicated by the ancient Hebraic concept of ḥokmah integrates a 'practical wisdom' of handling daily experience with the kind of wisdom which is 'attunement' to the world and ultimately to God as creator and sustainer of all. Fiddes brings detailed exegesis of texts from the ancient wisdom literature into interaction with an account of the subject in late-modern thought, in order to form a theology in which seeing the world is knowing a God whose transcendent reality is always immanent in the signs and bodies of the world. He thus argues that participation in a triune, relational God shapes a wisdom that addresses problems of a dominating self, and opens the human person to others.
Fidde's patient and fascinating exegesis of ancient texts shows how Hebrew and Christian conceptions of wisdom cohere with these concerns of modern Continental philosophy. * Clare Carlisle, The Times Literary Supplement *
I must admit that have done almost no justice to the depth and significance of biblical scholarship that Fidde's addresses in this vast work, and I have only gestured toward the wonderful connections that he makes between contemporary society, both its faults and its hopeful possibilities, and the ancient writings of wisdom that have been passed on to us as part of a determinate religious tradition. Indeed, as I neared the end of the volume, I had the sneaking suspicion that I would be returning to the volume again and again in order to find more use for the valuable insights which his latest book presents us with. I have few doubts, moreover, that this impression will be anything less than accurate. * Colby Dickinson, The Heythrop Journal *
Fiddes has attempted a complex interweaving of three distinct strands in his interests, Christian doctrine, modern Continental philosophy, and an early doctoral focus on Wisdom literature. Fiddes produces his weave with such consummate skill that any reader is bound to come away impressed ... * David Brown, Journal of Theological Studies *
This is an important book that illuminates every topic it discusses and it discusses a great deal. * Paul Richardson, The Church of England Newspaper *
ISBN: 9780198709756
Dimensions: 235mm x 157mm x 24mm
Weight: 666g
436 pages