Skip to product information
1 of 1

The Heart Has Its Reasons

Regular price $36.95
Regular price $0.00 Sale price $36.95
Sold out
An exploration of an often neglected area of theological anthropology - the unity of human emotion and reason embodied in the Biblical concept of the heart.The Heart Has Its Reasons explores a hith...
Read More
  • 26 May 2016
View Product Details
An exploration of an often neglected area of theological anthropology - the unity of human emotion and reason embodied in the Biblical concept of the heart.

The Heart Has Its Reasons explores a hitherto neglected area of theological anthropology: the unity of human emotion and reason embodied in the Biblical concept of the heart. While the theological contours of human rationality have long been clearly drawn and presented as the exclusive seat of the image of God, affectivity has been relegated to a secondary position. With the reintegration of the body into recent philosophical and theological discourses, a number of questions have arisen: if the image (also) resides in the body, how does this change one's view of the theological significance of human affect? In what way is our likeness to God realised in the whole of what we are? Can one overcome the traditional dissociation between intellect and affect by a renewed theory of love? In conversation with patristic and medieval authors like Irenaeus, Tertullian, Gregory of Nyssa, Maximus, and Thomas Aquinas, and in dialogue with more recent interlocutors such as Blaise Pascal, Ricoeur, Marion, Milbank, and John Paul II, Beáta Tóth pursues a novel theological vision of the essential unity of our humanity.
files/i.png Icon
Price: $36.95
Pages: 268
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: James Clarke
Publication Date: 26 May 2016
Trim Size: 9.02 X 5.98 in
ISBN: 9780227175873
Format: Paperback
BISACs: RELIGION / Christian Theology / General, Christianity, Theology
REVIEWS Icon
This book represents an important contribution to a Christian vision of affectivity - essential for understanding the human condition and our relationship with God. Through her study of such figures as Thomas Aquinas, Paul Ricoeur, Pope John Paul II, and Jean-Luc Marion, Toth has developed a 'Christian logic of affectivity' and the implications for theological anthropology. A timely study.
— Declan Marmion, Professor of Systematic Theology, St Patrick's College, Maynooth, Ireland

This is a deep, rich, and surprising theological anthropology. Employing the riches of the theological tradition, Tóth overcomes the centuries-old rupture between reason and affect by retrieving the biblical concept of the heart - life's 'innermost core' - and the 'median zone,' reuniting the sensible and the spiritual. With an intensity worthy of Pascal, she thus shows how embodied human life can still be considered the image of God and of God's immense love.
— Anthony J. Godzieba, Professor of Theology & Religious Studies, Villanova University
Introduction
1 Reason, Faith, and the Rediscovery of Sensibility
2 The Essential Polarity of the Human Condition
3 Human Likeness to God
4 Human Emotionality and the Imago Dei
5 The Unity of Love
6 Between Embodiment and Spirituality
7 Gathering the Threads: The Theological Contours of Human Emotionality
Bibliography
Subject Index