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  • 1
    Language: Italian
    Year of publication: 2012
    Titel der Quelle: Prima della filosofia
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2012) 163-193
    Keywords: Voegelin, Eric, ; Wellhausen, Julius, ; Bible Criticism, interpretation, etc.
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  • 2
    Article
    Article
    In:  Israel and the Cosmological Empires of the Ancient Orient (2021) 279–299
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2021
    Titel der Quelle: Israel and the Cosmological Empires of the Ancient Orient
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2021) 279–299
    Keywords: Voegelin, Eric, ; Voegelin, Eric, Criticism and interpretation ; Bible Criticism, interpretation, etc. ; History Philosophy
    Abstract: One of the great challenges in dealing with a text is to address the event or events that cannot be included within it. Nowhere is this more crucial than when the text turns on the revelation of the transcendent, that which transcends not just the text but all that is. Voegelin was familiar with this problem and developed a sophisticated philosophical perspective that allowed him to navigate the perennial complications of biblical literary criticism. In particular, he understood that this was not merely a challenge for readers of sacred texts, but a pivotal issue in comprehending the emergence of history as the framework within which we locate the events of history. Where in history is history itself properly located? The perspective that includes all perspectives, it would seem, is not a perspective. My essay will be a rereading of Israel and Revelation in light of such questions.
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  • 3
    Article
    Article
    In:  Israel and the Cosmological Empires of the Ancient Orient (2021) 263–278
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2021
    Titel der Quelle: Israel and the Cosmological Empires of the Ancient Orient
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2021) 263–278
    Keywords: Voegelin, Eric, ; Voegelin, Eric, Criticism and interpretation ; Bible Criticism, interpretation, etc. ; God Biblical teaching
    Abstract: This paper raises a number of critical questions concerning Eric Voegelin’s work, Israel and Revelation. First, does Voegelin’s vision that the kingdom of G-d entail the dissolution of national, racial, and ethnic groups, most notably the Jewish people, provide a basis for a peaceful and viable world order? Or does it in fact give expression to Christian supersessionism that does not tolerate different or competing world views and therefore calls for their suppression and destruction? Second, writing in the immediate aftermath of the Shoah, his work does not address the fundamental questions of divine righteousness, i.e., is G-d truly omnipotent, omnipresent, engaged, and just in dealing with human beings? Apart from his model of submission, do human beings bear responsibility for bringing order into the world in which we live? Third, Voegelin misjudges the character of the literary sources found in the Hebrew Bible, insofar as he simplistically presupposes that biblical literature is too closely identified with the events that it portrays. Such a perspective prevents him from understanding how biblical literature portrays and interprets events to serve as a basis from which later generations of readers, such as Judaism and Christianity, might learn and construct their own understandings of the world and of G-d. Fourth, to what degree does Voegelin artificially choose elements of biblical literature, such as the prophetic books of Isaiah and Jeremiah, that support his understanding of G-d and history, and ignore those that do not, such as Ezekiel and the Book of the Twelve Prophets, that present very different understandings of ideal human and divine interrelationships? Furthermore, to what extent does he selectively read elements of the Book of Isaiah that support his understanding, prompting him to misunderstand the book? Finally, to what degree does he misunderstand Judaism, particularly its concept of the chosen people, thereby ignoring Judaism’s view that nations can and should live together in peace in keeping with the laws of Noah? The balance of the paper addresses each of these questions.
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