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The Place of the Spirit
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An imaginative exploration of how the concepts of 'place' and 'location' can be meaningfully applied to our understanding of the Trinity.Is there any way to talk theologically about the Trinity and...
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28 August 2014

An imaginative exploration of how the concepts of 'place' and 'location' can be meaningfully applied to our understanding of the Trinity.
Is there any way to talk theologically about the Trinity and place? What might the 'placedness' of creation have to do with God's triunity? In The Place of the Spirit, Sarah Morice-Brubaker considers how anxieties about place have influenced Trinitarian theology - both what it is asked to do and the language in which it is expressed. When one is nervous about collapsing God into created horizons, she suggests, one is apt to come up with a model of Trinity that refuses place. Distance becomes a primary way of situating the divine persons in relations to each other. Conversely, theologians who wish to avoid a too-remote God likewise recruit Trinitarian language to suit that purpose. They, too, use language that encourages the importance of place, expressing triunity in terms of coinherence and mutual indwelling. And yet, suggests Morice- Brubaker, the question has received full-on attention in other areas of ethics, philosophy, and systematic theology. The Place of the Spirit calls for Trinitarian thought to avail itself of those insights and offers some ways in which it may do so.
Is there any way to talk theologically about the Trinity and place? What might the 'placedness' of creation have to do with God's triunity? In The Place of the Spirit, Sarah Morice-Brubaker considers how anxieties about place have influenced Trinitarian theology - both what it is asked to do and the language in which it is expressed. When one is nervous about collapsing God into created horizons, she suggests, one is apt to come up with a model of Trinity that refuses place. Distance becomes a primary way of situating the divine persons in relations to each other. Conversely, theologians who wish to avoid a too-remote God likewise recruit Trinitarian language to suit that purpose. They, too, use language that encourages the importance of place, expressing triunity in terms of coinherence and mutual indwelling. And yet, suggests Morice- Brubaker, the question has received full-on attention in other areas of ethics, philosophy, and systematic theology. The Place of the Spirit calls for Trinitarian thought to avail itself of those insights and offers some ways in which it may do so.
Price: $29.99
Pages: 162
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: James Clarke
Publication Date:
28 August 2014
Trim Size: 9.02 X 5.98 in
ISBN: 9780227174371
Format: Paperback
Morice-Brubaker's work is a wonderful example of ressourcement. She offers a thoughtful, experimental contemporary theological work grounded in the tradition (of patristic Trinitarian theology).
— Mark S. Medley
— Mark S. Medley
Foreword by Cyril O'Regan
Acknowledgments
1 Placing the Question
2 Patristic Precedents
3 Moltmann's Perichoretic Spaces for God and Creation
4 No Place for the Spirit? Jean-Luc Marion's Placial Refusal
5 Notes Toward a Trinitarian Theology of Place
Bibliography
Acknowledgments
1 Placing the Question
2 Patristic Precedents
3 Moltmann's Perichoretic Spaces for God and Creation
4 No Place for the Spirit? Jean-Luc Marion's Placial Refusal
5 Notes Toward a Trinitarian Theology of Place
Bibliography