Available Formats
An Apostle for Atheists: Paul in Modern Philosophy
By (Author) Dr Ole Jakob Lland
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
28th December 2023
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Theology
Agnosticism and atheism
227.06
Hardback
208
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
What is a modern philosopher to make of Paul, the apostle What do non-Christian philosophers in Europe gain from reading ancient letters from Christianitys first great ideologue, and letters addressed to groups of people lost to time To ask this question is to acknowledge that despite religious faith being regarded by many as a stage that our modern societies have left behind, contemporary philosophers are confronted with questions such as multiculturalism and religious fundamentalism in the wake of immigration and the increasing presence of religious minorities. The Letters of Paul have gained the interest of several philosophers, and the interpretations of the apostle have taken many forms. Looking closely at Pauls letters which have gained most interest from atheist philosophers, The First Letter to the Corinthians and the Letter to the Romans, this book offers an overview of the various ways they have been understood. It pays close attention also to the readings of Paul in the three thinkers, Friedrich Nietzsche and Sigmund Freud canonized as two of the great pillars of the modern critique of religion with Spinoza as one of their important predecessors. Confronting these readings with insights not only from the more recent philosophical readings of the apostle but also from historical-critical scholarship on the Bible, this book lifts the veil over a new picture of the apostle as a figure with potential value for non-Christians and atheists. An Apostle for Atheists leaves us with ideas that compel us to reconsider Pauls negative reputation for secular modernity and appreciate him as a figure of a radically new politics as well as a renewed psychoanalysis.
Ole Jakob Lland is Associate Professor of religion, worldviews and ethics at the University of South-Eastern Norway, Norway.