Lexington Books / Fortress Academic
Pages: 320
Trim: 6¼ x 9
978-1-9787-0180-9 • Hardback • February 2019 • $147.00 • (£113.00)
978-1-9787-0182-3 • Paperback • May 2023 • $42.99 • (£35.00)
978-1-9787-0181-6 • eBook • February 2019 • $40.50 • (£30.00)
Andrew T.J. Kaethler is academic dean and assistant professor of theology at Catholic Pacific College.
Sotiris Mitralexis is assistant professor of philosophy at the City University of Istanbul and visiting research fellow at the University of Winchester.
Part I. Rethinking Ontology within History
1. Ontology versus Fideism: Christianity’s Accountability to History and Society
Haralambos Ventis
2. Ontology, History and Relation (schesis): Gregory of Nyssa's Epektasis
Giulio Maspero
3. Syn-odical Ontology: Maximus the Confessor’s Proposition for Ontology within History and in the Eschaton
Dionysios Skliris
4. The Liturgy behind Liturgies: The Church’s Metaphysical Form
David W. Fagerberg
5. The Kantian “Two-images” Problem, Its Lesson for Christian Eschatology, and the Path of Maximian Analogy
Demetrios Harper
Part II. Beyond Being and Time: Eschatological Hermeneutics
6. Zizioulas and Heidegger: “Eschatological Ontology” and Hermeneutics
Matthew Baker
7. What Does “Rising from the Dead” Mean? A Hermeneutics of Resurrection
Maxim Vasiljević
8. Ecstatic or Reciprocal Meaningfulness?: Orthodox Eschatology between Theology, Philosophy, and Psychoanalysis
Nikolaos Loudovikos
Part III. Personhood Between Ontology and History
9. The Ontology of the Person – An Outline
Christos Yannaras
10. Berdyaev’s Solution to History: Redeeming Persons in Historical Love
Daniel S. Robinson
11. Joseph Ratzinger’s Imago Dei Anthropology in the Reconciliation of Ontology and Salvation History
Isabel C. Troconis Iribarren
12. Praying and Presence: Kierkegaard on Despair and the Prolepsis of the Self
Chris Doude Van Trosstwijk
Part IV. Politics Between Being and Time
13. Mapping the Theo-political: Metaphysical Prolegomenon for Political Theology
Jared Schumacher
14. The Eucharist Makes the Church Repent: Eucharistic Ecclesiology and Political Theology Daniel Wright
15. How Realistic Are Christian Politics? A Case for Eschatological Realism
Logan M. Isaac
It is in Christ that time and eternity, history and metaphysics, hold together. This Christological conviction—and the relational understanding of reality that it entails—unites Andrew T.J. Kaethler and Sotiris Mitralexis’s extraordinary collection of essays. By no means do the authors agree on every point. But the relational ontology of love on display in this book flows from a shared, ever-deepening movement into the triune God of history.
— Hans Boersma, J.I. Packer Professor of Theology, Regent College
How we perceive reality and comport ourselves depends on our understanding of temporality. In this important volume, an ecumenical group of noteworthy scholars unfolds for the reader the rich implications of this claim for philosophy, theology, and indeed, for everyday life. A splendid achievement and rewarding read!
— Jens Zimmermann, Canada Research Professor in Humanities, Trinity Western University