Intercultural Theology vis-à-vis Ecumenical and Interreligious Dialogue

A special issue of Religions (ISSN 2077-1444).

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 December 2022) | Viewed by 32947

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Faculty of Theology, Salesian Pontifical University, 000139 Rome, Italy
Interests: practical and empirical theology; contextual theology; inculturation and interculturality; interreligious dialogue and conflict; religion, human rights and citizenship; religious education and pedagogy; youth studies and ministry; public theology
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Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Religious traditions with their universal intent on human salvation or wellbeing have de-territorialized themselves or migrated from the place of their origin along the trade routes in the company of merchants and colonizers. Moreover, in the contemporary world, every aspect of society, namely, economic, socio-political, cultural and religious features, is de-territorialized. The intersection of the complex features of diverse cultural and religious traditions in a globalized world poses daunting challenges and innovative opportunities. Cultures can differ in their core aspect of meaning-value systems and linguistic-expressive systems, giving rise to socio-political systems and eco-economic systems that characterize a people. Likewise, religions can differ in their articulation of transcendence and immanence. They can uphold absolute transcendence (e.g., Islam, Judaism) or absolute immanence (e.g., Taoism, Confucianism), or they can take the mediating stance of immanent-transcendence (e.g., Christianity with its belief in God-incarnate, Hinduism) or transcendent-immanence (e.g., Buddhism).

Although distinction can be made between culture and religion in the modern secular context, in its origin religion is so bound to the culture, as soul to the body, that separating them would mean the decline and demise of both. The strong bond between religion and its culture of origin faces a challenge as the former enters new cultural territories. The challenge is to express and share the religious core integrating the features of new cultures through the process of inculturation/acculturation. Given that the newly encountered cultures themselves are generally animated by a religious core, the migrant religion faces the dilemma of complete isolation to preserve its identity or full immersion risking self-destructive syncretism. Hence, as a religion moves from one context into another, it necessitates a critical diachronic intercultural dialogue to maintain and develop its identity; and when it spreads out into diverse contexts simultaneously, it needs to engage in a critical synchronic intercultural dialogue to maintain its unity in diversity. Since culture is a dynamic reality, religious traditions have to engage in intercultural theology both diachronically and synchronically to maintain and progress in their understanding of the transcendental reality and be relevant to the local context and the wider world.

History of religions testifies to the inner divisions or sectarianism based on religio-cultural sensitivities. In the Christian context, this may be exemplified by the emergence of churches, such as the Coptic Orthodox Church, Greek Orthodox Church, Anglican Church, Lutheran Church, and the Roman Catholic Church. Besides the historical socio-political factors, it cannot be denied that underlying the denominational differences there are the religio-cultural and linguistic factors in understanding and expressing the Christian faith. Analogously, this is true also in the case of other religious traditions: for example, the sectarian divisions in Hinduism, like Shaivism and Vaishnavism, or the inner divisions in Islam in terms of Sunni and Shi’ah communities. A dialogue for unity in diversity among denominations or sects of religious traditions would require an interdenominational or ecumenical dialogue rendered possible by the complex process of intercultural theology. Divisions in a way point to monocultural assertion of religious truth as against intercultural exploration of the transcendental reality.

The fact that culture is enlivened by a religious core implies that one cannot engage in intercultural theology without some dialogue with the religious core of the other culture, or with its ideological core, in the case of a secular culture. Likewise, interreligious dialogue can be facilitated and furthered through intercultural theology. In this sense, intercultural theology and interreligious dialogue represent intersecting features of a complex process. Such a process can forestall further divisions and even help overcome the existing divisions both within and between religious traditions. Intercultural theology in facilitating ecumenical and interreligious dialogue can provide a deeper scrutiny of the divine mystery, a progressive consolidation of unity in diversity, a wholesome experience of cosmotheandric (Cosmic-Divine-Human) wellbeing.

The focus of the present Special Issue is to carry forward intercultural theology as a process not only for enriching the theological discourse within the context of one’s own faith-community, but as an added stimulus for engaging in ecumenical and interreligious dialogue. The centrality of culture in the ecumenical and interreligious dialogue suggests that these in turn can give rise to a multifaceted intercultural theology.

In this sense, the scope of the Special Issue is to explore innovative aspects of intercultural theology in relation to ecumenical and interreligious dialogue. The efforts made by scholars in this regard can help overcome the confessional or sectarian view of intercultural theology and find its full significance and rightful place in close association with ecumenical and interreligious dialogue. Insofar as dialogue is the central concern, our effort can enhance the existing literature on intercultural theology by relating it to the literature on ecumenism and interreligious dialogue. Such an innovative effort we hope can contribute to cosmotheandric (Cosmos-God-Human) communion and wellbeing.

Theoretical and empirical studies with reference to intercultural theology are solicited from interdisciplinary perspectives of cultural anthropology, religious pluralism, ecumenism, contextual theology, religious pedagogy, etc. Authors who are interested in submitting an essay for this Special Issue are invited to send a 300-word abstract of his/her/their paper to the guest editor at vincent@unisal.it by 31th December 2021. Final manuscripts can by submitted any time before 1 July 2022. All essays will be peer reviewed.

Prof. Dr. Francis-Vincent Anthony
Guest Editor

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Keywords

  • Intercultural dialogue
  • inculturation
  • acculturation
  • interreligious dialogue
  • ecumenical dialogue
  • contextual theology
  • religious universalism
  • cosmotheandric wellbeing

Published Papers (14 papers)

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Editorial

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5 pages, 200 KiB  
Editorial
Intercultural, Ecumenical and Interreligious Dialogue: An Introduction
by Francis-Vincent Anthony
Religions 2023, 14(9), 1143; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14091143 - 06 Sep 2023
Viewed by 815
Abstract
Religious traditions with their universal intent on human salvation or well-being have de-territorialized themselves or migrated from the place of their origin along trade routes in the company of merchants, invaders, and colonizers [...] Full article

Research

Jump to: Editorial

29 pages, 751 KiB  
Article
Intercultural Lived Ecclesiology: The Asian Synodal Praxis of Communio, Partecipatio et Missio Inter Gentes
by Francis-Vincent Anthony
Religions 2023, 14(7), 942; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14070942 - 21 Jul 2023
Viewed by 1290
Abstract
The current synodal process (2021–2024) engaging the worldwide Catholic Church at the micro, meso and macro levels involves bringing Christians from across cultures, ethnic communities, linguistic groups and nationalities to interact and shape their journey as people of God. Without wanting to reproduce [...] Read more.
The current synodal process (2021–2024) engaging the worldwide Catholic Church at the micro, meso and macro levels involves bringing Christians from across cultures, ethnic communities, linguistic groups and nationalities to interact and shape their journey as people of God. Without wanting to reproduce the intense debate that is in progress, we limit ourselves to examining the crucial issue—to a great extent ignored—of the intercultural lived ecclesiology associated with the inter gentes synodal praxis of communion, participation and mission. Although the synodal journey appears to be promising, the endogenous and exogenous ecclesial and societal differences implied in the inter gentes discernment can render it a complex transformative endeavor, entailing reciprocal enrichment and mutual critique. Taking up ideas that emerged in the various episcopal conferences in Asia in dialogue with some key themes in one of the European, namely, the German Episcopal Conference, we trace the intercultural challenges and prospects of communio, partecipatio et missio inter gentes, with a view to transforming the Church’s way of being and functioning. Full article
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16 pages, 848 KiB  
Article
The Human Being in Eastern Church Father’s and Al-Ghazali’s Philosophical Theology
by Nur Serikovich Kirabaev and Olga Vasilievna Chistyakova
Religions 2023, 14(7), 854; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14070854 - 29 Jun 2023
Viewed by 959
Abstract
The authors analyze two historical types of philosophical culture—the classical Eastern Patristics and Arab–Muslim medieval thought. They are united by the religious doctrine of man, which allows considering the intercultural and inter-theological nature of these traditions. In more particular terms, the article examines [...] Read more.
The authors analyze two historical types of philosophical culture—the classical Eastern Patristics and Arab–Muslim medieval thought. They are united by the religious doctrine of man, which allows considering the intercultural and inter-theological nature of these traditions. In more particular terms, the article examines the understanding of the human being of the thinkers of Nicaea and post-Nicaea periods of Eastern patristics—Athanasius of Alexandria and Maximus the Confessor—and Abu Hamid al-Ghazali as the most profound representative of the Sufi philosophical–theological system of the Middle Ages. The authors highlight the philosophical, intercultural, and interreligious significance of the mentioned anthropological concepts. The article focuses on the comparability and consistency of the ideas of the Church Fathers and al-Ghazali. Particular attention is paid to Islam’s theoretical image of man as a caliph—a successor—of the Creator on the Earth. Comparative studies reveal the patristic vision of man, containing in himself the fullness of Divinity and humanity. The main points of the dyophysite Christian understanding of the God Incarnate in contrast to the monophysite currents of Apollinarianism are revealed. The depth of the Christological views of Athanasius of Alexandria and Maximus the Confessor is presented. Al-Ghazali’s doctrine of man is substantiated as a conceptual understanding of man’s place in the system of the world created by God, which is seen as a holistic and systematized doctrine of humanity in Muslim philosophy. Conclusions are made about the comparability and the presence of intersections between Eastern Christian, Byzantine, and Muslim types of thought. Full article
18 pages, 399 KiB  
Article
Invigorating Interfaith Consciousness for the Common Good: Reimagining the Role of African Religion and Pentecostalism in Contemporary South Africa
by Gallous Atabongwoung, Johannes M. Lütz and Denise A. Austin
Religions 2023, 14(4), 486; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14040486 - 04 Apr 2023
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2728
Abstract
Contemporary South Africa reflects complex, diverse, and evolving religious realities. Changes continue to manifest at the confluence of encounters between various religions and rapid changes in social institutions that affect, in one way or another, various religions in the nation. These realities are [...] Read more.
Contemporary South Africa reflects complex, diverse, and evolving religious realities. Changes continue to manifest at the confluence of encounters between various religions and rapid changes in social institutions that affect, in one way or another, various religions in the nation. These realities are typically embedded in sociocultural contexts and give clarity and meaning to religious experiences. In the post-apartheid era, the spirit of openness toward religious tolerance often dwindles when it comes to interactions between African religion and Pentecostalism. When people understand why followers of other religions believe and practice their rituals and sacraments, this knowledge may help dispel mis- and disinformation and thereby construct inter-religious common ground. Using an extensive review of the relevant literature, this article investigates some of the factors that may limit harmony between African religion and Pentecostalism in South Africa. After providing some definitions and historical context, we discuss the power and legacy of anti-apartheid interfaith solidarity. We also explore ongoing factors hindering interfaith engagements between African religion and Pentecostalism in South Africa. We then explore opportunities for interfaith dialogue in South Africa. Utilizing Walter Hollenweger’s Pentecostal intercultural theology, we argue that expressive liturgy for biodiversity and sustainability, communal participation for reconciliation, and experiential spirituality focused on land care could provide a potential ‘fourth’ approach to interfaith dialogue for African religion and Pentecostalism in South Africa. This includes underappreciated albeit profitable interrelationships between Indigenous knowledge, traditional spirituality, and sustainable development. We also acknowledge some limitations and opportunities for future research. Finally, we offer a succinct concluding synthesis that recapitulates the paper’s main points. This article aims to invigorate interfaith consciousness through meaningful thematization of pertinent issues, including the articulation and application of relevant intercultural theology. Full article
10 pages, 265 KiB  
Article
Rethinking the Intercultural Potential of Religious Education in Public Schools: Contributions from Intercultural Theology
by Thor-André Skrefsrud
Religions 2023, 14(2), 224; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14020224 - 08 Feb 2023
Viewed by 1941
Abstract
This paper asks how intercultural theology can inspire a critical and constructive reflection on the intercultural potential of non-confessional religious education (RE). Taking the Norwegian non-confessional RE subject as a starting point, the paper draws attention to the tendency to present religions, worldviews, [...] Read more.
This paper asks how intercultural theology can inspire a critical and constructive reflection on the intercultural potential of non-confessional religious education (RE). Taking the Norwegian non-confessional RE subject as a starting point, the paper draws attention to the tendency to present religions, worldviews, and denominations as single entities with distinct characteristics. As emphasized by Jackson, Jones and Meyer, and others, a systemic-oriented approach will largely capture the institutionalized sides of religion. Consequently, in schools, the intercultural dimension of RE can easily be reduced by emphasizing students’ need for encyclopedic knowledge about different traditions, overlooking how religion is embedded in social life and transforms, develops, and interconnects through everyday practices outside of institutionalized religious life. This line of argument sets the stage for the next part, examining how intercultural theology can create critical awareness of the inner diversity and interconnectedness of denominations and religious traditions. The paper argues that the descriptive and normative framework of intercultural theology can inspire educators to reflect critically on the intercultural dimension of a non-confessional RE. Full article
13 pages, 276 KiB  
Article
The Apocalypse as a Cosmotheandric Communion: A Hindu-Christian Dialogue
by Shruti Dixit
Religions 2022, 13(10), 950; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13100950 - 10 Oct 2022
Viewed by 1813
Abstract
Theologians have been engaged in the reflections of the eschatological in the social and moral conditions of the world for some years now, but the emphasis on the indisputable need for an interfaith dialogue at such a moment is evidently absent. Arguably, the [...] Read more.
Theologians have been engaged in the reflections of the eschatological in the social and moral conditions of the world for some years now, but the emphasis on the indisputable need for an interfaith dialogue at such a moment is evidently absent. Arguably, the apocalyptic times of pandemic, induced communal hatred, bilateral hostility, and racial discriminations, on a global level, which are also accompanied with many instances by increased charitable behavior and a heightened sense of human responsibility. This paper focuses on apocalyptic theologies in the context of Hindu and Christian settings in India and how they interact, creating the possibility for an interfaith dialogue. Based on Raimon Panikkar’s neologism ‘cosmotheandric vision,’ the paper establishes a relation between intercultural theologies and interfaith dialogue. The apocalypse can be studied as being a constant reminder of the cosmotheandric nature of the universe, for Hindus and Christians alike, fostering a dialogue between the two religions, entirely cognizant of their hermeneutical differences. The moment of apocalypse can be analyzed as a point of cosmotheandric union and absolute togetherness, wherein cultural and religious differences disappear with the consciousness of the whole, the One. Full article
9 pages, 251 KiB  
Article
Culture-Specific and Cosmopolitan Aspects of Christian Coexistence. A Postcolonial Perspective on Ecumenical Relations
by Michael Nausner
Religions 2022, 13(10), 896; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13100896 - 23 Sep 2022
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1108
Abstract
This article wants to shed light on some of the cultural complexities of the ecumenical movement by putting it in conversation with postcolonial theory. It argues that the academic discourse of postcolonial theory and the ecclesial movement of ecumenism are siblings of sorts [...] Read more.
This article wants to shed light on some of the cultural complexities of the ecumenical movement by putting it in conversation with postcolonial theory. It argues that the academic discourse of postcolonial theory and the ecclesial movement of ecumenism are siblings of sorts in as much as they both deal with the lingering consequences of past violence and with the tensions between particularity and universality. A growing awareness of the problem of postcolonial conditions in the ecumenical movement is briefly documented with reference to the journal VOICES/VOCES and Simón Pedro Arnold’s suggestion of an ‘inter theology’ sensitive to the power dynamics and cultural intermingling in global Christianity. In a similar vein, Claudia Jahnel is arguing for an intercultural theology that takes processes of hybridization seriously and therefore needs to develop forms of ‘vernacular ecumenism’. It is an ecumenism that materializes in countless Christian migrant communities around the globe. To understand and recognize the complexities in these postcolonial Christian identity formations, some kind of ‘cosmopolitan ecumenism’, as André Munzinger calls it, needs to be developed. This way, hybrid cultural and theological formations can be recognized, and hegemonic universalisms resisted. Full article
16 pages, 316 KiB  
Article
Intercultural Theology Competence for an Intercultural Faith Education
by Antony Christy Lourdunathan
Religions 2022, 13(9), 806; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13090806 - 30 Aug 2022
Viewed by 1202
Abstract
The article begins with clarifying what an Intercultural Faith Education would mean in a global culture that seems to be growing more pronounced in its pluralistic nature. Taking for granted the evident fact that Intercultural theology is the bedrock for a faith education [...] Read more.
The article begins with clarifying what an Intercultural Faith Education would mean in a global culture that seems to be growing more pronounced in its pluralistic nature. Taking for granted the evident fact that Intercultural theology is the bedrock for a faith education in an intercultural context, it seeks to enumerate certain specific Intercultural theology competences that can render the process of intercultural faith education possible, significant and feasible. From a catechetical or faith education point of view, it analyses the three perspectives of faith that intercultural theology should promote, namely, the dialogic personalisation of faith, the prophetic challenging of faith and the cohesive exchange of faith—corresponding to personal and interpersonal dimensions, communitarian and social dimensions and expressive and missionary dimensions of faith, respectively. Each of these three perspectives declinate themselves into at least three specific competences, amounting to nine practical competences in all: comparative understanding, critical interpretation, cultural collaboration, the recognition of power equations, the ratification of identity formation, the recommendation of theological bonum, equality of expression in faith, an eagerness to learn and empathy in engagement. Interpreting each of these competences and their distinctive contributions, the article configures the foundational framework of intercultural theology for intercultural faith education in terms of these competences. Full article
14 pages, 260 KiB  
Article
Charismatic Pneumatology as Ecumenical Opportunity: Orthopraxy, Subjectivity, and Relational Ontologies of the Holy Spirit
by Jason Wesley Alvis
Religions 2022, 13(8), 712; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13080712 - 03 Aug 2022
Viewed by 1516
Abstract
The majority of new Christian communities have been appearing in Charismatic and Pentecostal movements, especially in the Global South. Along with these shifts emerge new possibilities to better understand the diversity of Christian perspectives and to rethink what it means to be “in [...] Read more.
The majority of new Christian communities have been appearing in Charismatic and Pentecostal movements, especially in the Global South. Along with these shifts emerge new possibilities to better understand the diversity of Christian perspectives and to rethink what it means to be “in relation” to a global Christian community. After opening connections between pneumatology and relational ontology, this article engages the work of three emerging Pentecostal/Charismatic thinkers in particular, whose pneumatologies provide novel opportunities to think more carefully about “relationality” and ecumenical unity: Nimi Wariboko, Amos Yong, and Clark Pinnock. Wariboko’s pneumatology helps us acknowledge the very kind of relational ontology God has with Godself, as a split subject, thereby disrupting not only our all-too-human meaning-making process, but also the way God signifies the world for us. Yong’s pneumatology emphasizes human practice or an “orthopraxy” that is polyphonous, historically rooted, and oriented around spiritual gifts not only for sanctification but also for worldwide witness. Finally, Pinnock emphasizes the connections between creativity and relationality, pointing to how at-one-ment is also the telic work of the Spirit. Full article
14 pages, 300 KiB  
Article
The Impact of Cultural Diversity on End-of-Life Care
by Caroline Yih
Religions 2022, 13(7), 644; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13070644 - 13 Jul 2022
Viewed by 2602
Abstract
Despite the universality of death for humanity, end-of-life care needs and expectations are highly unique and influenced by the individual’s cultural conditioning, values, and beliefs. In the pursuit of quality end-of-life care provision within the increasingly complex and diverse contemporary medical context, it [...] Read more.
Despite the universality of death for humanity, end-of-life care needs and expectations are highly unique and influenced by the individual’s cultural conditioning, values, and beliefs. In the pursuit of quality end-of-life care provision within the increasingly complex and diverse contemporary medical context, it is vital for cultural idiosyncrasies to be taken into consideration in order to attend to the individual patient’s needs and end-of-life goals. Palliative chaplains, as the spiritual care specialists within the multidisciplinary healthcare team, play a crucial role in the support and facilitation of the holistic vision of end-of-life care delivery. However, the capacity of the chaplains to become culturally competent practitioners are often insufficiently addressed in their professional educational pathways, creating additional challenges for them in their practice. Using Hong Kong as a case study, this article examines the impact of cultural diversity on the effectiveness of the chaplains’ delivery of end-of-life spiritual care. Specifically, special attention will be focused on two identified challenges resulting from the lack of integration of local cultural understandings within the religion-cultural practice framework of chaplaincy formation: the cultural taboo of death, and the cultural idiosyncrasies in end-of-life communication. This article hopes to raise awareness of cultural incongruencies within the current chaplaincy professional formation and development, and to initiate further attention and efforts to support chaplains in becoming culturally competent practitioners in the pluralistic healthcare landscape. Full article
15 pages, 257 KiB  
Article
Holism of Religious Beliefs as a Facet of Intercultural Theology and a Challenge for Interreligious Dialogue
by Vojko Strahovnik
Religions 2022, 13(7), 633; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13070633 - 07 Jul 2022
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1493
Abstract
Religious beliefs are intertwined with religion or religious tradition. This article argues for a holistic understanding of religious beliefs and suggests that the formation and maintenance of religious beliefs are holistically sensitive to the background information, which includes the culture’s meaning–value system. Beliefs [...] Read more.
Religious beliefs are intertwined with religion or religious tradition. This article argues for a holistic understanding of religious beliefs and suggests that the formation and maintenance of religious beliefs are holistically sensitive to the background information, which includes the culture’s meaning–value system. Beliefs embed appreciation of this background without the believer being explicitly conscious of how it has shaped them. This presents a problem for interreligious dialogue. In an interreligious dialogue, actors rarely recognise that one or more actors have no direct and unmediated access to this background. Any model of intercultural theology must thus understand religious belief holistically if it purports to facilitate interreligious dialogue. Holism is a vital epistemic and pragmatic facet of intercultural theology. Intercultural theology can use several strategies that could circumvent this problem—for example, analogies, metaphors, narratives, and even jokes. These are important for two reasons: First, they allow us to recognise that someone lacks an understanding of a cultural background; second, they effectively convey relevant aspects of a cultural background. The article concludes by outlining the significance of epistemic humility for interreligious and intercultural understanding. Full article
13 pages, 329 KiB  
Article
Emerging Religious Consciousness—A Cosmotheandric Understanding of Reality in the Light of Sophiology of Some Russian Theologians towards an Eco-Theology
by Johan Buitendag and Corneliu C. Simuț
Religions 2022, 13(4), 296; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13040296 - 30 Mar 2022
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1830
Abstract
Intercultural theology is increasingly a major subject matter of 21st-century scholarly inquiry. This results in an interreligious discourse and encounter at different levels. However, gone are the days when the aim is to identify or even to fuse certain overlapping magisteria. A linguistic-cultural [...] Read more.
Intercultural theology is increasingly a major subject matter of 21st-century scholarly inquiry. This results in an interreligious discourse and encounter at different levels. However, gone are the days when the aim is to identify or even to fuse certain overlapping magisteria. A linguistic-cultural approach takes us beyond mergers or grand unified theories. To speak of reality as a whole is not to talk about the whole of reality. Creatio continua, the radical newness of each moment and phase unfolds in unpredictable ways. The ecological crisis of planet earth has forced all responsible researchers to engage with the Anthropocene by establishing space for a common earth religion. Through ressourcement, it appears that the sophiology of theologians of the Russian Silver Age (e.g., Solovyov, Bulgakov, and Florensky) can open up a vista in the spirit of aggiornamento to a meta-religious approach recognising the infinite capacity of humanity to transcend particularised religious identities and so belong in different ways too, with, and in God. In the end, sophiology is a form of progressive Christianity that puts together philosophy and faith by promoting an ecological public theology that is concerned about raising society’s awareness about creation as material nature. Full article
22 pages, 340 KiB  
Article
Pope Francis’ Culture of Dialogue as Pathway to Interfaith Encounter: A Special Focus on Islam
by Roberto Catalano
Religions 2022, 13(4), 279; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13040279 - 24 Mar 2022
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 4203
Abstract
Pope Francis’ leadership has stimulated several debates within the Catholic Church and even in larger segments of the public. One of the most prominently debated issues is the one concerning the relationship with people of different religions and, more specifically, with the world [...] Read more.
Pope Francis’ leadership has stimulated several debates within the Catholic Church and even in larger segments of the public. One of the most prominently debated issues is the one concerning the relationship with people of different religions and, more specifically, with the world of Islam. Since 2013, the Argentinean pontiff appeared to be unambiguously committed to finding an alternative pathway to the much-publicized category of ‘clash of civilisations, which, in the last few decades, has been the reference paradigm in Christian–Muslim relationships. Papal initiatives, gestures and journeys have consistently aimed at a ‘culture of dialogue and encounter’. Nevertheless, the present pope’s open attitude has encountered severe criticism even inside certain circles of the Catholic world, which have accused him of compromising on theological issues. However, Pope Francis is highly appreciated by leaders of other traditions, including Muslims. In the face of such debate, Bergoglio has often recalled that all his statements and actions are deeply rooted in the spirit of the Second Vatican Council. The present article wishes to show how Bergoglio’s engagement to establish constructive dialogical rapports with Muslims is an effective way towards the real implementation of the Council while opening avenues for what could be defined as ‘interreligious synodality’. Full article
9 pages, 216 KiB  
Article
Intercultural Theology as In-Between Theology
by Henning Wrogemann
Religions 2021, 12(11), 1014; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12111014 - 17 Nov 2021
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 6551
Abstract
Since the beginning of the 21st century, the term intercultural theology has been gaining more and more traction. At the same time, the terms world Christianity and anthropology of Christianity have also become established. This article inquires into the profile of intercultural theology [...] Read more.
Since the beginning of the 21st century, the term intercultural theology has been gaining more and more traction. At the same time, the terms world Christianity and anthropology of Christianity have also become established. This article inquires into the profile of intercultural theology against the other two terms and defines the subject as in-between theology with regard to such factors as audience, media, power, methodology, plurality, and connectivity. Looking forward, the author identifies current challenges and proposes that intercultural theology should be understood as a both descriptive and normative discipline, that the driving force behind it is the universal-missionary truth claim of the New Testament message of salvation, and that—as a subject with a primarily systematic orientation—it is committed to a comprehensive understanding of reality and theology. Full article
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