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Is God Really in History?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 October 2008

Frederick Sontag
Affiliation:
Professor of Philosophy, Pomona College, California

Extract

For some time it seemed as if Christianity itself required us to say that ‘God is in history’. Of course, even to speak of ‘history’ is to reveal a bias for eighteenth- and nineteenth-century forms of thought. But the justification for talking about the Christian God in this way is the doctrine of the incarnation. The centre of the Christian claim is that Jesus is God's representation in history, although we need not go all the way to a full trinitarian interpretation of the relationship between God and Jesus. Thus, the issue is not so much whether God can appear or has appeared within, or entered into, human life as it is a question of what categories we use to represent this. To what degree is God related to the sphere of human events? Whatever our answer, we need periodically to re-examine the way we speak about God to be sure the forms we use have not become misleading.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1979

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References

page 385 note 1 The Phenomenon of Man, trans. Wall, Bernard (New York, 1961, Harper Torchbook). All page references are to this edition.Google Scholar

page 386 note 1 The Future of Man (Harper Torchbook, New York, 1969), trans. Denny, Norman. All page references are to this edition.Google Scholar

page 387 note 1 The Divine Milieu (Harper and Row, New York, 1960). All page references are to this edition.Google Scholar

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page 389 note 1 See The Question of Being (Vision Press, London, 1958).Google Scholar