Divine Multiplicity: Trinities, Diversities, and the Nature of Relation
Divine Multiplicity: Trinities, Diversities, and the Nature of Relation
Associate Professor of Christian Theology
Professor of Ecumenical Theology
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Abstract
This book poses critical questions and suggests constructive possibilities regarding the extent to which trinitarian and pluralist discourses can be put into fruitful conversation with one another. On the one hand, the book interrogates the possibilities of trinitarian theology and its ethical promise with regard to divine and creaturely relationality by putting it into specific engagement with discourses of pluralism, diversity, and multiplicity. It asks how trinitarian conceptions of divine multiplicity might open the Christian tradition to increasingly more creative and affirming visions of creaturely identities, difference, and relationality—including the specific difference of religious plurality. Alternatively, where can the triadic patterning evident in the Christian theological tradition be seen to have always exceeded the boundaries of Christian thought and experience, inhabiting and determining other religious traditions' conceptions of divine and/or creaturely reality in ways internal to their own distinctive histories? On the other hand, the book interrogates the possibilities of various discourses on pluralism by putting them in a very particular and concrete pluralist context. Religious pluralists, comparative theologians, and scholars of religious studies are place alongside and put into conversation with theological and doctrinal work carried out within the (albeit broadly conceived) normative thread of the Christian trinitarian tradition. To what extent can pluralist discourse collect within itself a convergent diversity of orthodox, heterodox, postcolonial, process, poststructuralist, liberationist, and feminist sensibilities while avoiding irruptions of conflict, competition, or the logic of mutual exclusion?
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Front Matter
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Introduction: The Whence and the Whither of “Divine Multiplicity”
Chris Bosrel andS. Wesley Ariarajah
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Philosophical Explorations: Divinity, Diversity, Depth
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Interreligious Explorations: Religious Diversity and Divine Multiplicity
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Abhinavagupta’s Theogrammatical Topography of the One and the Many
Loriliai Biernacki
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One and the Many: The Struggle to Understand Plurality within the Indian Tradition and Its Implications for the Debate on Religious Plurality Today
S. Wesley Ariarajah
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Differential Pluralism and Trinitarian Theologies of Religion
S. Mark Heim
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Spirited Transformations: Pneumatology as a Resource for Comparative Theology
Holly Hillgardner
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Abhinavagupta’s Theogrammatical Topography of the One and the Many
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Theo-Anthropological Explorations: Queer God, Strange Creatures, Storied Spirit
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Doctrinal Explorations: Trinity, Christology, and the Quality of Relation
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Absolute Difference
Kathryn Tanner
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Multiplicity and Christocentric Theology
John F. Hoffmeyer
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Divine Relationality and (the Methodological Constraints of) the Gospel as Piece of News: Tracing the Limits of Trinitarian Ethics
Chris Bosel
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The Universe, Raw: Saying Something about Everything
Cynthia L. Rigby
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Absolute Difference
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End Matter
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