Liturgical Theology after Schmemann

Liturgical Theology after Schmemann

An Orthodox Reading of Paul Ricoeur

While only rarely reflecting explicitly on liturgy, French philosopher Paul Ricoeur (1913-2005) gave sustained attention to several themes pertinent to the interpretation of worship, including metaphor, narrative, subjectivity, and memory. Inspired by his well-known aphorism, “The symbol gives rise to thought,” Liturgical Theology after Schmemann offers an original exploration of the symbolic world of the Byzantine Rite , culminating in a Ricoeurian analysis of its Theophany “Great Blessing of Water.” .

The book examines two fundamental questions: 1) what are the implications of the philosopher’s oeuvre for liturgical theology at large? And 2)how does the adoption of a Ricoeurian hermeneutic shape the study of a particular rite? Taking the seminal legacy of Orthodox theologian Alexander Schmemann (1921-1983) as its point of departure, Butcher contributes to the renewal of contemporary Eastern Christian thought and ritual practice by engaging a spectrum of current theological and philosophical conversations.

  • Cover
  • LITURGICAL THEOLOGY AFTER SCHMEMANN
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • CONTENTS
  • Foreword
  • Introduction
  • PART I: “HOW WILL THE LAMP ENLIGHTEN THE LIGHT?”
    • 1 “After Schmemann”: Introducing Ricoeur into the Conversation
    • 2 Western Perspectives
  • PART II: “NO TONGUE CAN HYMN YOUR WONDERS”
    • 3 Meaning in/and Metaphor
    • 4 At the Intersection of the Via Positiva and the Via Negativa
  • PART III: “TODAY YOU HAVE APPEARED TO THE WORLD”
    • 5 “The Summoned Subject”
    • 6 Truth as Attestation
    • 7 Liturgical Time, Narrative, Memory, and History
  • PART IV: “THE VOICE OF THE LORD CRIES OUT UPON THE WATERS”
    • 8 Manifestation and Proclamation
    • Conclusion
    • Appendix: “Service of the Great Blessing of the Waters”
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index

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