Angels and Monotheism
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Publishing:31st Jan '25
£17.00
This title is due to be published on 31st January, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
This Element delves into the paradoxical significance of angels in monotheism, highlighting their significant role in all major religions.
This Element argues that angelology has been overlooked in modern theology and studying angels as divinely created beings is crucial for understanding monotheistic religions and theology as a whole. It contends that the spirit of modern science was inspired by medieval scholastics' angelological lucubrations, rather than the Scientific Revolution.While angels have played a decisive role in all the world's major religions and continue to loom large in the popular religious and creative imagination, modern theology has tended to ignore or trivialize them. The comparatively few scholarly works on angels over the last century have typically interpreted them as mere symbols and metaphors: they are said to offer glimpses not of the divine order, but of human desires, anxieties, and ideologies. Angelology has collapsed into anthropology. By contrast, this polemical book argues for the indispensable importance of studying angels as divinely created beings, for theology at large, and for understanding the defining doctrine of monotheistic religions in particular. Additionally, the book contends that the spirit of modern science did not originate with the so-called Scientific Revolution but was actually inspired centuries earlier by the angelological lucubrations of medieval scholastics.
ISBN: 9781009374620
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
75 pages