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God in Post-Christianity
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02 May 2025
Argues for a new elemental and sensory experience of God.
God in Post-Christianity combines Eastern and Western influences into a dazzling survey of the contemporary theological landscape. Reading "the age of the Spirit" as "the age of the Breath," the book argues for a material, elemental, and sensory theology of God following the death of the ontotheological God of metaphysics. Drawing inspiration equally from Irigaray and Feuerbach, it offers a vision of God that is both feminist and humanist, a divine becoming for humanity, a sacred alliance with Nature. By presenting and analyzing the modern philosophies of Hegel, Schelling, and Merleau-Ponty, as well as such contemporary figures as John Caputo and Catherine Keller, and by drawing on unexpected, forgotten, or neglected sources such as Vedic poetry and American Mormonism and figures such as Averroes and Amalric of Bène, the book makes an original argument about God that resonates with currents in new materialism, comparative theology, and affect theory. Both speculative and mythopoetic, it is intended to forge a way forward for humanity to achieve the intersubjective and interreligious peace we all crave and deserve.
"The 'new elemental philosophical theology' being proposed in this highly inventive and evocative work is very timely. I was deeply moved and found myself, in the end, more or less transformed by the conclusions reached. I think it perfectly suited as a guide for the times in which we strive to find a future for theological discourse of any kind." — Colby Dickinson, Loyola University Chicago
"This is a bold and entirely original work of contemporary philosophical theology. Synthetic, creative, and compelling, it will be of great interest to anyone interested in contemporary theology, and, more broadly, those interested in considerations of contemporary science and religion, new materialisms, and comparative theology." — Jeffrey W. Robbins, Lebanon Valley College
"With God in Post-Christianity, Lenart Škof accomplishes something remarkable: he suffuses theology with time and materiality, with elemental realities and vibrant life. The fences between monotheism and animism, between divine realms and the earthly domain, between matter and spirit, crumble and give way to torrents of vitality. The resulting work is an indispensable reference for understanding the ecological implications of philosophically inflected theology." — Michael Marder, author of Green Mass: The Ecological Theology of St. Hildegard of Bingen
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Prologue: God in the Breath
Part I: The Past
1. God in Stone
2. God in the Neanderthal
3. God in Matter
Part II: The Future
4. God in Telepathy
5. God in the Future
6. God in the Third Age
Postlude: God in Dualis
Notes
Bibliography
Index
About the Author