Spirituality and the Avoidant Personality

1992 ◽  
Vol 49 (2) ◽  
pp. 165-172 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Rebecca Propst
Keyword(s):  

“I have often discussed with patients the neediness of God, and that by virtue of being in God's image, they could still feel needy and be in God's image. … Initially, these ideas are just too new for many of the patients I deal with. The general thrust of their acquired theology has always taught them that ‘following Jesus means there will be no pain.’”

2004 ◽  
Vol 49 (4) ◽  
pp. 448-450
Author(s):  
Kenneth C. Clatterbaugh
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Kenneth Borris

Despite the centrality of Spenser’s faery queen for his Faerie Queene and its Platonically idealized mode of mimesis, most studies do not define her symbolic scope or address her transcendental implications, though the poem explicitly evokes them. Elizabeth I was typically represented as God’s image and proxy, and Spenser extrapolates Gloriana from her through Platonic idealization of the beloved (I.pr.4). Just as Gloriana never directly appears in the action and Arthur cannot find her despite his continuing searches, so she is definitively beyond representation. Her role reflects divinity’s paradoxical immanence yet transcendence in Platonic and Judeo-Christian traditions: to some extent mediated, rather as Gloriana’s agents somewhat express her nature; yet still beyond apprehension. Spenser’s engagement with these issues of theology and representation approximates Florentine Platonism’s serio-ludic “poetic theology” involving paradox, wordplay, and riddling fables. By creating this deliberately inconclusive fiction, he audaciously rejected the prevailing requirements of literary narrative so as to adumbrate sublimities beyond the ordinary scope of language.


Religions ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (8) ◽  
pp. 575
Author(s):  
Olga Chistyakova

The article traces the formation of Eastern Christian anthropology as a new religious and philosophical tradition within the Early Byzantine culture. The notion “Patristics” is reasoned as a corpus of ideas of the Church Fathers, both Eastern and Western. The term “Eastern Patristics” means the works by Greek-Byzantine Church Fathers, who in the theological disputes with the Western Church Fathers elaborated the Christian creed. Based on an analysis of the texts of Greek-Byzantine Church Fathers, the most important provisions of Eastern Patristics are deduced and discussed, which determined the specificity of Christian anthropology. In this context, different approaches of the Eastern Fathers to the explanation of the Old Testament thesis on the creation of man in God’s image and likeness and the justification of the duality of human essence are shown. Particular attention is paid to considering the idea of deification as overcoming the human dualism and the entire created universe, the doctrine of the Divine Logoi as God’s energies, and the potential elimination of the antinomianism of the earthly and Divine worlds. The article reflects the anthropological ideas of the pre-Nicene Church Father Irenaeus, the non-canonical early Christian work The Shepherd of Hermas, and the teachings on the man of the classical Eastern Patristics period by Athanasius of Alexandria, Gregory of Nyssa, and Maximus the Confessor.


1988 ◽  
Vol 125 (5) ◽  
pp. 475-494 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. C. Tipper

AbstractThe development of techniques for quantitative stratigraphic correlation has tended to outstrip their acceptance by practising stratigraphers. To make these techniques more readily accessible and to encourage their use, this paper presents a brief, general review of the problem of quantitative stratigraphic correlation and then shows how, using a natural framework for stratigraphic correlation, the stratigraphic time-series, there can be seen an orderly pattern among them. The annotated bibliography, of almost 400 articles, includes a majority of those references concerned with quantitative stratigraphic correlation, in whatever sense: the scheme of annotation provides a straightforward, albeit subjective indication of the general thrust of each article.


Theology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 124 (6) ◽  
pp. 444-445
Author(s):  
George Newlands
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-21
Author(s):  
Graham D. Stanton

Abstract This article summarises eight theological perspectives on youth and young people. Young people are variously seen as (1) sinful creatures in need of redemption; (2) gifts of God and sources of joy; (3) developing beings in need of guidance and instruction; (4) open to conversion; (5) vulnerable to exploitation; (6) fully human, made in God’s image; (7) a prophetic presence; and (8) a prophetic voice. Rather than simply affirm all 8 perspectives as important, an integrated theological perspective on youth views young people within the distinctive features of their created reality, with particular strengths and assets along with distinct needs and deficits, to be fully capable as bearers of the divine image, and with emerging capability as social agents.


Author(s):  
Bertrand Taithe

This chapter explores the centenary of Trafalgar in 1905, not only from the British but especially from a French perspective. That year marked the shift from memory and narrative iteration at first hand to commemoration. It analyses history and memory both from the perspective of 1905 — in the contexts of the recent Entente Cordiale with Britain and the dismantling of the Napoleonic religious consensus — as well as of the subsequent historiography of that period. It explores the paradox of French participation in remembering defeat and concludes that — while going against the general thrust of French commemoration of 1805 — French celebrations in 1905 fitted with a pattern of memorializing past conflicts.


2018 ◽  
Vol 70 (4) ◽  
pp. 661-678
Author(s):  
Sayed Hassan Akhlaq
Keyword(s):  

2004 ◽  
pp. 310-321
Author(s):  
George P. Fletcher
Keyword(s):  

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