Language:
French
Year of publication:
2022
Titel der Quelle:
Etudes Théologiques et Religieuses
Angaben zur Quelle:
97,1 (2022) 49-65
Keywords:
Weil, Simone, Criticism and interpretation
;
Hillesum, Etty, Criticism and interpretation
;
Hidden God
;
Presence of God (Judaism)
;
God Philosophy
;
Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Philosophy
;
Mysticism History 20th century
Abstract:
Based on the study of the writings of Simone Weil and Etty Hillesum during the Second World War, this article intends to identify the characteristics of an unprecedented moment in the history of mysticism where the experience of God’s presence is irreducibly associated with the ordeal of his absence in the events of this world. If this link between the experience of absence and that of presence echoes the classic image of John of the Cross’s “dark night”, its conceptualisation in both Simone Weil and Etty Hillesum reveals two emerging features that break with the earlier mystical tradition. On the one hand, the ordeal of absence is no longer experienced as a purifying punishment inflicted by God himself, but rather as the ordeal of contemporary reality where God is recognised as the Absent One « par excellence ». On the other hand, the experience of presence does not put an end to that of absence, so that one can speak of a concomitance of the absence and the presence of God in the mystical experience of the 20th century.
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