Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 206
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-4422-0642-7 • Hardback • November 2010 • $94.00 • (£72.00)
978-1-4422-0644-1 • eBook • November 2010 • $89.00 • (£68.00)
Scott Steinkerchner, OP, is associate director of the Center of Dominican Studies at Ohio Dominican University.
Chapter 1: The Problem and Promise of Interreligious Dialogue
Notes
Chapter 2: The Relativity of Certainty
The Context
Language-Games and Family-Resemblance
Meaning
World-Pictures
Doubts and Mistakes
Certainty
How Similar Must World-Pictures Be?
Scientific Evidence
Notes
Chapter 3: Talking Across Certainties
The Context
Letting the Difference Make a Difference
Working with Multiple World-Pictures
Religions and World-Pictures
How Different Can World-Pictures Be?
Engaging in Dialogue across Disparate World-Pictures
Other Interpretations of Wittgenstein
Notes
Chapter 4: A Model Dialogue across Disparate World-Pictures
The Tao Te Ching
The Tao
Effective Leadership
Wu-wei
The Gospel of John
The Arrest (18:1-12)
Before the High Priest (18:13-28)
Pilate's Trial (18:28b-19:16)
Jesus' Ressurection
Conclusions
Notes
Chapter 5: Principles and Practices of Comparative Theology
How to Engage in Comparative Projects
Beyond These Comparisons, What Might We Gain? What Do We Risk?
Notes
Bibliography
This book joins the growing rank of distinguished works on religious pluralism, interreligious dialogue, and comparative theology and will be a necessary reading for those interested in these challenging themes.
— Peter C. Phan, The Ignacio Ellacuria Chair of Catholic Social Thought, Georgetown University
Beyond Agreement is certainly original; it presents a Wittgensteinian approach to comparative theology and applies it by way of a reading of the Gospel of John through the Tao notion of wu wei. The text reads very well, the writing is clear, and the argument proceeds logically to its conclusion. This is solid scholarship on interreligious dialogue.
— Thomas Cattoi, Jesuit School of Theology at Santa Clara and Graduate Theological Union
Steinkerchner makes both a vigorous and a rigorous defense of comparative theology: he shows how and why we can and should learn from those whom we hold to be fundamentally wrong. Whether one is convinced by his case or not, following him as he carefully constructs it, is both thoroughly engaging and enlightening.
— Paul F. Knitter, Paul Tillich Professor of Theology, World Religions, and Culture, Union Theological Seminary
This is a carefully argued challenge to those who find religious differences problematic. The author turns difference into an opportunity for learning, self-transformation, and critical engagement, helpfully furthering the project of comparative theology.
— Gavin D'Costa, University of Bristol
This is an excellent book that takes up the challenge of whether and how to pursue interreligious dialogue when one has no interest in changing one's religious affiliation because one knows his own faith tradition is right. Steinkerchner wisely suggests that the purpose of dialogue is not agreement, lest it be defeated from the start, but to find a rapport and understanding that lies beyond agreement. Drawing on examples from Buddhism, Taoism, and Christianity, this engaging book is a creative contribution to an area of increasing interest and concern—dialogue or lack thereof among the religions of the world.
— Donald Goergen, OP, author of Fire of Love