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Essays

Questioning Inter-Religion

This essay is part of a book series on Karma and Grace by Neena Mahadev.

Pope Leo XIV at One Year

Three contributors reflect on Pope Leo XIV’s first year.

The Pentagon Is Extremely Spiritual, But Who Is Its God?

We live in a hyper-ideologized age. The inner circles of both “us” and “them” are getting smaller and smaller. The world is increasingly polarized, partisan, fundamentalist. Or at least it seems so. There are forces—including algorithms—at work, teaching us to think in “us” versus “them” frames.

Global, Radical, Jewish

We don’t need scholars to tell us that Jewish radicalism is something of the past, dead, buried, and long forgotten. The world already tells us that every day. We need articulations of Jewish radicalism for today that activate its legacy.

Flannery O’Connor’s Carnival Purity: A Question for Political Theology

The Catholic Southern Gothic author Flannery O’Connor’s short story A Temple of the Holy Ghost explores the contradictions of incarnation in ways relevant to contemporary discourse between Catholicity, political theology, and transfeminism. By engaging with the carnivalesque and Freud’s uncanny, I will apply the story to conversations about trans inclusion in Catholic communities.

 The Politics of Forgiveness

If someone is in an abusive relationship, are they to forgive their abuser? If someone is actively and repeatedly harming us, are we to forgive them? If this theological-ethical conundrum gives you pause, you are not alone.

An Ethic of Vulnerability in an Age of Co-Creativity: Pushing the Provisional Boundaries of the Contemporary Moral Theology of Josef Fuchs

While giving tribute to Fuchs’s noteworthy efforts at reimagining our understanding of moral norms by appreciating the emergent process of human evolution through the appropriation of a dynamic/future-oriented theological anthropology, this analysis will seek to press the limits of his robust framework whilst inquiring what an ethic of vulnerability might look like in an age of terrestrial/ecological crisis.

Engaging with Uncomfortable Texts

The tendency to shy away from difficult interpretations not only renders Scripture less impactful but also dilutes the lived experiences of those who confront these realities daily and seek to make meaning of what is happening to them.

Vulnerability as Witness: Pentecostal Flesh and the Decolonial Renewal of Catholic Political Theology

The lived practices of Afro-Bolivian farmers invite not only a philosophical reinterpretation of vulnerability but also a rethinking of Catholic social thought. Their adaptive and relational forms of life disclose a theological reconfiguration of Catholic political theology.

Daniel Bensaïd’s Joan of Arc

By revisiting the myth of Joan of Arc, Daniel Bensaïd endows his political militancy with a potential theological scope: that of a de-phallicized thinking of the divine.

Save Yourselves!

Saving ourselves is not about creating an escapist bubble of churchly naivety while the world crumbles around us…