ABSTRACT

In a diverse and innovative selection of new essays by cutting-edge theologians and philosophers, Suffering Religion examines one of the most primitive but challenging questions to define human experience - why do we suffer? As a theme uniting very different religious and cultural traditions, the problem of suffering addresses issues of passivity, the vulnerability of embodiment, the generosity of love and the complexity of gendered desire. Interdisciplinary studies bring different kinds of interpretations to meet and enrich each other. Can the notion of goodness retain meaning in the face of real affliction, or is pain itself in conflict with meaning?
Themes covered include:
*philosophy's own failure to treat suffering seriously, with special reference to the Jewish tradition
*Martin Buber's celebrated interpretations of scriptural suffering
*suffering in Kristevan psychoanalysis, focusing on the Christian theology of the cross
*the pain of childbirth in a home setting as a religiously significant choice
*Gods primal suffering in the kabbalistic tradition
*Incarnation as a gracious willingness to suffer.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

The study of religion

chapter 1|23 pages

Unjustifiable suffering

chapter 2|20 pages

Rereading Job as textual theodicy

chapter 3|17 pages

Suffering in theory

chapter 5|62 pages

Divine suffering and the hermeneutics of reading

Philosophical reflections on Lurianic mythology

chapter 6|18 pages

Suffering and incarnation