Clooney SJ, Francis X.: The covenant in the Hindu context : some reflections inspired by Christophe Chalamet’s »›Covenant‹ as the basis and theme of comparative theology«.
Online-Ausgabe in bonndoc: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11811/12512
Online-Ausgabe in bonndoc: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11811/12512
@article{handle:20.500.11811/12512,
author = {{Francis X. Clooney SJ}},
title = {The covenant in the Hindu context : some reflections inspired by Christophe Chalamet’s »›Covenant‹ as the basis and theme of comparative theology«},
publisher = {Lehrstuhl Systematische Theologie},
year = 2024,
month = oct,
note = {This brief paper responds to Christophe Chalamet’s »›Covenant‹ as a basis and topic for comparative theology«. Chalamet’s essay can be appreciated as an original and creative effort to widen the field for comparative theology by taking up a term well-known in Biblical theology, and pondering how such a term might be productive in interreligious exchange. It builds on Chalamet’s work by showing how an analogous covenantal theme is present also in Hindu source materials which similarly value trust and commitment, the request for protection and promise of protection, mutual love, etc. The comparison presented here is simply an experiment that seeks to chart a new strand of substantive comparative theological work, as themes hitherto considered uniquely Biblical are now to be read in the context of other religious traditions.},
url = {https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11811/12512}
}
author = {{Francis X. Clooney SJ}},
title = {The covenant in the Hindu context : some reflections inspired by Christophe Chalamet’s »›Covenant‹ as the basis and theme of comparative theology«},
publisher = {Lehrstuhl Systematische Theologie},
year = 2024,
month = oct,
note = {This brief paper responds to Christophe Chalamet’s »›Covenant‹ as a basis and topic for comparative theology«. Chalamet’s essay can be appreciated as an original and creative effort to widen the field for comparative theology by taking up a term well-known in Biblical theology, and pondering how such a term might be productive in interreligious exchange. It builds on Chalamet’s work by showing how an analogous covenantal theme is present also in Hindu source materials which similarly value trust and commitment, the request for protection and promise of protection, mutual love, etc. The comparison presented here is simply an experiment that seeks to chart a new strand of substantive comparative theological work, as themes hitherto considered uniquely Biblical are now to be read in the context of other religious traditions.},
url = {https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11811/12512}
}