ABSTRACT

Built space is both a physical entity as well as a socially and historically constructed place. It constantly interacts with human beings, affecting their behavior, thinking, and feeling. Doing religious work in a particular environment implies acknowledging the surroundings to be integral to theology itself. The contributors to this volume view buildings, scriptures, conversations, prayers, preaching, artifacts, music and drama, and built and natural surroundings as contributors to a contextual theology.

The view of the environment in which religion is practiced as integrated with theology represents not just a new theme but also a necessity if one is to understand religion's own depth. Reflections about space and place and how they reflect and affect religious experience provide a challenge and an urgent necessity for theology. This is particularly important if religious practitioners are to become aware of how theology is given expression in the existential spatiality of life. Can space set theology free? This is a challenging question, one that the editor hopes can be answered, at least in part, in this volume.

The diversity of theoretical concepts in aesthetics, cultural theory, and architecture are not regarded as a problem to be solved by constructing one overarching dominant theory. Instead, this diversity is viewed in terms of its positive potential to inspire discourse about theology and aesthetics. In this discourse, theology does not need to become fully dependent on one or another theory, but should always clearly present its criteria for choosing this or that theoretical framework. This volume shows clearly how different modes of design in sacred spaces capture a sense of the religious.

chapter |2 pages

PREFACE

chapter |14 pages

GODʼS HERE AND NOW IN BUILT ENVIRONMENTS

Introductory remarks on architecture as theology

chapter |16 pages

ARTISTIC GENEROSITY, HUMILITY AND EXPRESSION

Architecture as lived metaphor, collaboration, faith and compassion

chapter |20 pages

THEOLOGY, AESTHETICS, AND THE GOTHIC SPACE

Does scholastic theology have anything to do with the Gothic?

chapter |40 pages

“SYMBOLKIRCHEN”

as bridges or boundary stones in a merging Europe?

chapter |20 pages

SPATIALITY, PRACTICE AND MEANING

The existential ambiguity of urban chapels

chapter |22 pages

A SPIRITUAL CITY

Urban vision and the Christian tradition

chapter |28 pages

THE WAY OF CHRIST – THE WAY OF DAO

Artefacts at the crossroads of Western and Asian religions

chapter |14 pages

TRANSFIGURING REALITY

Surfaces, signs and metamorphoses in Johannes Schreiterʼs windows in the Grunewald church

chapter |24 pages

ARCHITECTURE FOR CHRISTIAN WORSHIP

The emerging United States experience

chapter |22 pages

LESS IS MORE?

The modernist headquarters of the Norwegian Lutheran Home Mission Society (1935): an inspiration for aesthetic/theological reflection

chapter |30 pages

CAN CHURCHES FLY?

The liturgy of architecture: an aesthetic and theological perspective

chapter |4 pages

LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS