An Augustinian response to Jean-Louis Chrétien’s phenomenology of prayer

International Journal of Philosophy and Theology 79 (3):311-322 (2018)
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Abstract

ABSTRACTThis article interrogates Jean-Louis Chrétien’s phenomenological appreciation of prayer as a call to the transcendent other, by juxtaposing it with the style and content of Augustine’s Confessions. In the Confessions, prayer is less the contradiction of presence than it is the paradox of simultaneous presence-and-absence, God being both the most intimate and the most remote at the same time. It is concluded that Chrétien’s phenomenology fails to understand prayer as the reciprocity it claims to articulate because, despite affirming both the presence and the absence of God to the one praying, phenomenology cannot hold both these propositions in tension but must continually resolve them into a contradiction in which the subject ‘discovers’ God only by falling back on the self. The question is one of style and genre: Augustine’s speech addresses someone whereas Chrétien’s does not. In as much as he follows the phenomenological style established by Husserl, Chrétien cannot value any spe...

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Chrétien on the call that wounds.Bruce Ellis Benson - 2010 - In Bruce Ellis Benson & Norman Wirzba (eds.), Words of life: new theological turns in French phenomenology. New York: Fordham University Press. pp. 208-221.
Prayer as the posture of the decentered self.Merold Westphal - 2005 - In Bruce Ellis Benson & Norman Wirzba (eds.), The phenomenology of prayer. New York: Fordham University Press. pp. 11-31.
Chretien on the Call that Wounds.Bruce Ellis Benson - 2015 - Janus Head 14 (1):125-141.

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