Silence, Love, and Death: Saying Yes to God in the Theology of Karl Rahner
Shannon Nichole Craigo-Snell
Marquette University Press, 2008-06-30 - 253 pages
One
of the central elements of Karl Rahner's theology is the affirmation
that God offers salvation to every human being and, in so doing,
empowers each of us to say "yes" to this holy vocation. This
divine-human dialogue of offer and response is the heart of Rahner's
understanding of Christian faith. In this book, Shannon Craigo-Snell
explores what it means to say "yes" to God in Rahner's theology. Drawing
on a variety of his writings, Craigo-Snell focuses on three moments in
human freedom that Rahner repeatedly points to in describing how we say
"yes" to God: silence, love, and death. In Rahner's theology, the theme
of silence is often used to mark a posture of openness to the mysterious
other, both human and divine, which is a primary characteristic of what
it is to be human. This openness to the other is concretely realized in
love, such that human identity is both gift received and task
accomplished. Further, this self-possessing openness to the other is
fully actualized in an eternal inter-communion. Rahner's discussions of
eschatology do not center on an affirmation of the immortality of the
individual soul, but rather paint a portrait of communally sanctified
humanity that draws us forward into ourselves, our community, and God.
Attending to these three ways of saying "yes" to God generates an
understanding of Rahner's theology as neither modern nor postmodern, but
rather a challenging alternative vision that can be a vital resource
for contemporary feminist theologies.
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