This article analyzes the philosophical background of Schleiermacher's doctrine of redemption. The two philosophical strands of dialectic Neoplatonism and Romanticism form the basis of Schleiermacher's soteriology, in which Christ's redemption is seen not just as an act to liberate from sin, but the fulfillment of the coincidentia oppositorum (the coincidence of opposites) between the finite (individual) and the Infinite (the whole) within the dynamic dialectical interrelationship between them. By participating in Christ's perfect God-consciousness through receptivity to "absolute dependence," the individual experiences redemption. In its philosophical context, Schleiermacher's soteriology may be labeled as Christ-Centered Dialectic-Neoplatonic-Romantic-Soteriology. This article analyzes the philosophical background of Schleiermacher's doctrine of redemption. The two philosophical strands of dialectic Neoplatonism and Romanticism form the basis of Schleiermacher's soteriology, in which Christ's redemption is seen not just as an act to liberate from sin, but the fulfillment of the coincidentia oppositorum (the coincidence of opposites) between the finite (individual) and the Infinite (the whole) within the dynamic dialectical interrelationship between them. By participating in Christ's perfect God-consciousness through receptivity to "absolute dependence," the individual experiences redemption. In its philosophical context, Schleiermacher's soteriology may be labeled as Christ-Centered Dialectic-Neoplatonic-Romantic-Soteriology. This article analyzes the philosophical background of Schleiermacher's doctrine of redemption. The two philosophical strands of dialectic Neoplatonism and Romanticism form the basis of Schleiermacher's soteriology, in which Christ's redemption is seen not just as an act to liberate from sin, but the fulfillment of the coincidentia oppositorum (the coincidence of opposites) between the finite (individual) and the Infinite (the whole) within the dynamic dialectical interrelationship between them. By participating in Christ's perfect God-consciousness through receptivity to "absolute dependence," the individual experiences redemption. In its philosophical context, Schleiermacher's soteriology may be labeled as Christ-Centered Dialectic-Neoplatonic-Romantic-Soteriology. This article analyzes the philosophical background of Schleiermacher's doctrine of redemption. The two philosophical strands of dialectic Neoplatonism and Romanticism form the basis of Schleiermacher's soteriology, in which Christ's redemption is seen not just as an act to liberate from sin, but the fulfillment of the coincidentia oppositorum (the coincidence of opposites) between the finite (individual) and the Infinite (the whole) within the dynamic dialectical interrelationship between them. By participating in Christ's perfect God-consciousness through receptivity to "absolute dependence," the individual experiences redemption. In its philosophical context, Schleiermacher's soteriology may be labeled as Christ-Centered Dialectic-Neoplatonic-Romantic-Soteriology.
مجموعه
تاريخ نشر
2015
توصيف ظاهري
270-294
عنوان
Journal of Reformed Theology
شماره جلد
9/3
شماره استاندارد بين المللي پياييندها
1569-7312
اصطلاحهای موضوعی کنترل نشده
اصطلاح موضوعی
coincidentia oppositorum
اصطلاح موضوعی
German Romanticism
اصطلاح موضوعی
Neoplatonism
اصطلاح موضوعی
Schleiermacher
اصطلاح موضوعی
soteriology
نام شخص به منزله سر شناسه - (مسئولیت معنوی درجه اول )