God and Humanity in Auschwitz: Jewish-Christian Relations and Sanctioned MurderTransaction Publishers, 2009 M08 1 - 355 pages God and Humanity in Auschwitz synthesizes the findings of research developed over the last thirty years on the rise of anti-Semitism in our civilization. Donald J. Dietrich sees the Holocaust as a case study of how prejudice has been theologically enculturated. He suggests how it may be controlled by reducing aggressive energy before it becomes overwhelming. Dietrich studies the recent responses of Christian theologians to the Holocaust and the Jewish theological response to questions concerning God's covenant with Israel, which were provoked by Auschwitz. Social science has dealt with the psychosocial dynamics that have supported genocide and helps explain how ordinary persons can produce extraordinary evil. Dietrich shows how this research, combined with theological analyses, can help reconfigure theology itself. Such an approach may serve to help dissolve anti-Semitism, to aid in constructing such positive values as respect for human dignity, and to point the way to restricting future outbreaks of genocide. God and Humanity in Auschwitz surveys which religious factors created a climate that permitted the Holocaust. It also illuminates what social science has to tell us about developing a strategy that, when institutionally implemented, can channel our energies away from sanctioned murder toward a more compassionate society. The book has proven to be an essential resource for theologians, sociologists, historians, and political theorists. |
From inside the book
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... Holocaust emerged as a systematized program of cruelty and destruction that has hermeneutically informed post - 1945 theological reflection and social science research . This tragic horror , perpetrated in a supposedly Christian ...
... post - Holocaust era and has to make a conscious ef- fort to end Christian triumphalism . Any attempt to discuss the Nazi genocide , which restricts its meaning solely to the Jewish people , can- not communicate its universal message ...
... Holocaust experience so that its most basic features structural and ... post - World War II Christian thinkers and institutions has initially been ... Holocaust and its significance . Their work and their conclusions seem to be converging ...
... post- Holocaust Christian , in particular Catholic , institutional attitudes as well as the biblical and theological scholarship that has helped support this institutional change . Here is a classic case of scholars affecting ...
... post - Holocaust inquiry more critical for Christian self - understanding than that into the nature of the relationship between the anti - Judaism of theological pronouncements and the antisemitism of racist denunciation and murder ...
Contents
17 | |
Jewish People | 61 |
22 | 96 |
Scripture and Contextual Antisemitism | 99 |
2527 | 106 |
34 | 116 |
Christology and Antisemitism | 159 |
61 | 187 |
Emil Fackenheim | 209 |
Humanity and God as the Architects of Society | 217 |
Political Theology and Foundational Values | 227 |
78 | 257 |
The Holocaust and Modernity | 259 |
Conclusion | 291 |
Bibliography | 309 |
Index | 351 |
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God and Humanity in Auschwitz: Jewish-Christian Relations and Sanctioned Murder Donald Dietrich No preview available - 2017 |