We get all sorts of wierd and wonderful stuff about, Thomas Altizer, the death of God, Jean-Luc Marion, God Without Being (1991) and Joyce, Ulysses and Finnegans Wake then this quotation from Raschke, Theological Thinking: An In-quiry (Atlanta, Scholar’s Press, 1988), p134):
'Book’ is etymologically connected to ‘beech’, an ‘edible tree’ (c.f. the Greek root phago-). Thus the book is the tree, the symbol of life, that is ingested as a sacrament. Reading in the classical context is akin to the celebration of the ‘mass’, the assimilation of meanings, the consumption of a god, the transfer of presence (p140)
If you thought interpretive maximalism was sometimes a bit on the creative side, how's this for left-field?
In the absence of the Father, the Author(ity), the reading of such writing enacts the presence of the (M)other... (p141)
When you start putting bits of words in brackets, I think it's all going to end it tears.
And the grand conclusion?
An understanding of the self-kenotic God, the God who is other-than-God, requires theology which is other-than-theology, a writing which is the total presence of apocalyspse, the embodiment of the God who is Word, a universal eucharist. (p146)
Why do people write this stuff? Does he know what he means? Does he think we will? Or perhaps we're not meant to?
Right, that's better.
3 comments:
lol. good luck if you have to read much more of this rubbish!
Marc, can you give us a general progress report on the PhD? You seem to have read quite a lot this year. Have you written any more? How far along do you anticipate being before you start having to work for a living? And is someone (other than MS Word) spellchecking for you?
At the very least it should provide you with a delicious quotation for your conclusion.
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