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God's Wrong is Most of All

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God's Wrong is Most of All

Divine Capacity
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Description

We do not do God, politicians may say, explaining that theirs is the art of the possible. Some theologians have been reluctant with that plea, whilst practising the art of the assured. But what might God doing God entail? God is a relational word involved in human mutuality. With God, doing is one with being. There is always a God and ...situation obtaining: God and the astronomers, God and the tsunami. Then quickly a God but ...situation emerges and the wrong with it. Shakespearean repartee (Gods wrong is most of all: if thou didst fear to break an oath with him, Richard III, Act IV, Scene 4), and from Macbeth and King Lear, may help us focus further the inherent discrepancies of approach. Moreover, by long oath-taking tradition we invoke God in verifying verity, putting perjury on the line. What then of this universal guarantor of truth who is, by the same token, for ever blameworthy? Hence the theme of divine capacity (a wiser term here than omnipotence). For can there be a deep costliness, a wrong-bearing, on the part of God vis-a-vis the human scene, with its cry for compassion, pardon and redemption? Christian faith has always believed there is and traces it in this gift of habitable earth and more surely, in the Cross of Christ. That Cross, it has been said, is the avowal and acceptance of divine responsibility. If, in that human scene, love can turn suffering because of into suffering on behalf of, may it not be so with a love divine? Because of is plainly there in broken faith, angry blasphemy, base injustice, the sins of the world. Perhaps the other is known for real in the drama where all these, being suffered, were representatively turned to our salvation. That they were, this book explores.

Author Biography:

Kenneth Cragg was first in Jerusalem in 1939, and subsequently became deeply involved in areas of faith between Semitic religions under the stress of current politics. He later pursued doctoral studies in Oxford where he first graduated and became Prizeman' in Theology and Moral Philosophy, and where he is now an Honorary Fellow of Jesus College. He was a Bishop in the Anglican Jurisdiction in Jerusalem and elsewhere in the Middle East, and played ecclesiastical roles in Africa and India. A Certain Sympathy of Scriptures is a companion book to his Readings in the Qur'an (1988; 1999), and more broadly to his Faiths in Their Pronouns: Websites of Identity (2002). Other works by Bishop Cragg, and published by Sussex Academic Press, include: With God in Human Trust -- Christian Faith and Contemporary Humanism; The Weight in the Word -- Prophethood, Biblical and Quranic; and The Education of Christian Faith.
Release date Australia
February 1st, 2006
Author
Audience
  • Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Pages
204
Dimensions
229x152x23
ISBN-13
9781845191405
Product ID
1937194

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