Javascript must be enabled to continue!
“Neither the Spirit Without the Flesh”
View through CrossRef
This book claims that John Calvin developed "Greek" doctrines of the interim state of souls, resurrection, and beatific vision through his reading of ancient Christian sources like Irenaeus of Lyons. “Greek” had been a technical term in western theology since at least the twelfth century to denote heterodox eschatology. Thomas Aquinas had employed it in that sense, and early modern Catholics like Robert Bellarmine and Pierre Coton in turn applied it to Calvin.
The book demonstrates that, in this respect at least, Calvin's opponents were correct: he was a “Greek.” However, it questions whether that fact should lead modern theologians to dismiss him as a resource for contemporary reflection. Calvin's deep respect for and continuity with early Christian voices may serve as a positive model for theologians today, particularly in the Reformed tradition. By the same token, Reformed thinkers who seek inspiration from medieval scholasticism may find their relationship to Calvin complicated by the case presented here.
Title: “Neither the Spirit Without the Flesh”
Description:
This book claims that John Calvin developed "Greek" doctrines of the interim state of souls, resurrection, and beatific vision through his reading of ancient Christian sources like Irenaeus of Lyons.
“Greek” had been a technical term in western theology since at least the twelfth century to denote heterodox eschatology.
Thomas Aquinas had employed it in that sense, and early modern Catholics like Robert Bellarmine and Pierre Coton in turn applied it to Calvin.
The book demonstrates that, in this respect at least, Calvin's opponents were correct: he was a “Greek.
” However, it questions whether that fact should lead modern theologians to dismiss him as a resource for contemporary reflection.
Calvin's deep respect for and continuity with early Christian voices may serve as a positive model for theologians today, particularly in the Reformed tradition.
By the same token, Reformed thinkers who seek inspiration from medieval scholasticism may find their relationship to Calvin complicated by the case presented here.
Related Results
Phenomenologies of Incarnation in Michel Henry and Emmanuel Falque
Phenomenologies of Incarnation in Michel Henry and Emmanuel Falque
Bringing Michel Henry and Emmanuel Falque into dialogue, Mark Novak explores how they both articulate a phenomenology of the body and flesh in relation to incarnation.
...
Intimacy and the Anxieties of Cinematic Flesh
Intimacy and the Anxieties of Cinematic Flesh
In a "return" to Edmund Husserl and Sigmund Freud, Intimacy and the Anxieties of Cinematic Flesh explores how we can engage these foundational thinkers of phenomenology and psychoa...
Inaugurated Resurrection in Earliest Christianity
Inaugurated Resurrection in Earliest Christianity
Daniel W. Hayter explores the concept of ‘inaugurated resurrection’ within earliest Christianity; the view that believers have experienced a present resurrection with Christ, in ad...
Dance, Dance, Dance, Dance, Dance, Dance, Dance All Night!
Dance, Dance, Dance, Dance, Dance, Dance, Dance All Night!
This chapter examines Black women's Christian performance via contemporary television and the internet to gain insights into how screen audiences are invited to experience the Holy...
Letter versus Spirit
Letter versus Spirit
Chapter 4 turns its attention to the stasis of letter versus spirit. Traditionally, this stasis has been understood as pitting the exact words of a text against the author’s intent...
Gao Xingjian
Gao Xingjian
This chapter looks at how Gao Xingjian, the 2000 Nobel Prize laureate in literature, has brought Zhuangzi’s spirit of absolute liberation and freedom to the highest level. A discus...
Spirit in the Phenomenology of Spirit
Spirit in the Phenomenology of Spirit
Chapter 6 shows how and why Hegel’s general project in Phenomenology leads him to develop the kind of social theory we find in Spirit. The author argues that Spirit provides an int...
Viewing Trauma in Plutarch
Viewing Trauma in Plutarch
This chapter investigates Plutarch’s On Flesh- Eating. This work, which contains two logoi, is traditionally taken as a highly rhetorical and ‘youthful’ piece which reflects Plutar...

