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This item is a print on demand title and will be dispatched in 1-3 weeks.

Paperback / softback

£31.99

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN: 9780567698957
Number of Pages: 224
Published: 17/06/2021
Width: 15.6 cm
Height: 23.4 cm

This volume approaches questions concerning the status and meaning of suffering in Christian life and Christian theology through the lens of a variety of theological disciplines – biblical, historical, practical, political and systematic theology. Scholars from this range of fields concentrate on a number of questions: Is love intrinsically linked with suffering? Are suffering and loss on some level fundamentally good? How is – and how should – suffering and diminishment be viewed in the Christian tradition?

Featuring leading voices that include Linn Tonstad, Bernard McGinn, Anna Rowlands, John Swinton and Paul Murray, this volume brings together essays touching on concrete issues such as cancer, mental health, and the experience of refugees, and discusses broad themes including vulnerability, kenosis and tragedy. In correlating these themes with the examination of texts ranging from Paul’s letters to works of the Cappadocians, Thomas Aquinas, John of the Cross and Mother Teresa, Suffering and the Christian Life offers fresh and accessible academic approaches to a question of vital personal, existential significance.

Introduction
Karen Kilby (Durham University, UK) and Rachel Davies (Australian Catholic University, Australia)

Chapter 1
The Seductions of Kenosis, Karen Kilby (Durham University, UK)

Chapter 2
Suffering, Sin and Death in Paul, Dorothea H. Bertschmann (The College of the Resurrection, UK)

Chapter 3
Giving the Self through Death: A Crucified Christ as Gift in Galatians, Logan Williams (Durham University, UK)

Chapter 4
A Good Aim Yields Good Pain: Beneficial Pain in the Ethics of Gregory of Nyssa, Siiri Toiviainen Rø (University of Helsinki, Finland

Chapter 5
Gregory of Nazianzus on the Role of Satan in Human Suffering, Gabrielle Thomas (University of Durham, UK)

Chapter 6
Suffering, Dereliction, and Affliction in Christian Mysticism, Bernard McGinn (University of Chicago, USA)

Chapter 7
Protest Theism, Aquinas and Suffering, Rik Van Nieuwenhove (Durham University, UK)

Chapter 8
Suffering and the Desire for God in John of the Cross, Edward Howells (University of Roehampton, UK)

Chapter 9
Stop Kissing Me: Reading Mother Teresa with Bonaventure’s Help, Rachel Davies (Australian Catholic University, Australia)

Chapter 10
’There is still a lot of pollution in there’: Undoing Violent Ideologies, Undoing the Self, Heather M. DuBois (University of Notre Dame, USA)

Chapter 11
Reading Simone Weil In East London: Destitution, Decreation and the History of Force, Anna Rowlands (Durham University, UK)

Chapter 12
Reflections on Suffering and Bipolar Disorder: Three Forms of Suffering, John Swinton (University of Aberdeen, UK)

Chapter 13
Should I Love My Cancer?, Andrew Graystone (Durham University, UK)

Chapter 14
Depressive Suffering as Tragic Suffering: Theological Insights and Trajectories, Jessica Coblentz (St Mary’s College of California, USA)

Chapter 15
On Vulnerability, Linn Tonstad (Yale University, USA)

Chapter 16
Living Sacrifice: Is there a Non-pathological Way of Living Suffering as Sacrifice?, Paul D. Murray (Durham University, UK)

Bibliography
Index

Dr Karen Kilby (Durham University, UK), Professor Rachel Davies (Australian Catholic University, Australia)

Karen Kilby is Bede Professor of Catholic Theology at Durham University, UK.

Rachel Davies is Research Fellow at Australian Catholic University, Australia.

The volume will be constructive and thought-provoking for graduate students and scholars across a range of theological specialties, since it clearly demonstrates how assumptions about suffering shape discussions of sin, salvation, spiritual formation, and other key theological themes. * Modern Theology * Rather than treating suffering as a 'problem' to be explained, the contributors to this remarkable volume explore its impact on the texture of theology as a whole. The result is a multi-faceted demonstration of how profoundly what Christians think about suffering affects how they imagine discipleship. * Ian A. McFarland, Emory University, USA * A stimulating collection that is well worth ordering for the library. * Theology *

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