html5-img
1 / 9

Theology as Eschatology

Theology as Eschatology. Jürgen Moltmann. Introduction. Importance of Moltmann Theology of Hope: On the Ground and the Implications of a Christian Eschatology (1964) Coming of God (1996) J.M. advocate of “The Theology of Hope” “Eschatological Ontology ” Future is ontologically primary

jetta
Télécharger la présentation

Theology as Eschatology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Theology as Eschatology Jürgen Moltmann

  2. Introduction • Importance of Moltmann • Theology of Hope: On the Ground and the Implications of a Christian Eschatology (1964) • Coming of God (1996) • J.M. advocate of “The Theology of Hope” • “Eschatological Ontology” • Future is ontologically primary • “Theology as Eschatology • All theology is eschatologically driven • God’s revelation understood primarily as promise (and assurance of God’s faithfulness, and less about unveiling • The Meaning of Eschatology • Importance of the resurrection of Christ

  3. Introduction (cont.) • Focus and Outline of The Coming of God • Structure: • Personal Eschatology: “What will become of me?” • Ours is an embodied hope • Historical Eschatology: “What will become of the cosmos?” • Cosmic Eschatology: “What will become of the cosmos?” • Includes creation, nature • *Divine Eschatology: “What will become of God?” • The future must mean something not just to us, but to God • Two main concepts: • Adventus • God is coming to fulfill his promise • Nouvum • Renewal; eschatology as the “new” thing that God is doing

  4. Personal Eschatology and the Theology of Death • Death is terrible because of love • Importance of hope for the resurrection of the body • Key questions to personal eschatology

  5. Historical Eschatology: The Kingdom of God and Millennium • Importance of History • Milleninum is “transition” from history to eschatology, to new creation • Sharp distinction between Historical and Eschatological millenarianism • Historical Millenarianism • Political Millenarianism • Ecclesiastical Millenarianism • Epochal Millenarianism • Eschatological Millenarianism • Judgment • Judgment as cleansing • Hell?

  6. Cosmic Eschatology: Sabbath and Shekinah • “Christian Eschatology must be broadened out into cosmic eschatology for otherwise it becomes a Gnostic doctrine of redemption, and is bound to teach, no longer the redemption of the world but a redemption from the world, no longer the redemption of the body but a deliverance of the soul from the body.” Coming of God,259 • Shabbath and Shekinah • Entire world becomes a temple of God • Not annihilation of the world, but transformation Eternity within time • God emerges within time and folds time upon itself (p. 281) • Aeonic time (heaven) and transitory time (earth) • Human time is subsumed under God’s time • Temporal creation will become an eternal creation because all created beings will participate in God’s eternity

  7. Divine Eschatology • Basic question: What is the meaning for God himself of his glorification by human beings and all creation? • A feast of eternal joy and communion with creatures and creation

  8. Reflections • Rediscovering the role of eschatology in theology and faith • Christological and trinitarian ramifications of Christian eschatology • Importance of millennium • Ethical and practical implications of eschatology • Including socio-political implications • Relationship between time and eternity

  9. Questions • Overly speculative? • Selective use of biblical and historical tradition • Panentheistic? • Judgment • Universalism • Establishment of justice

More Related