Was Kierkegaard a Universalist?

Philosophies 9 (4):116 (2024)
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Abstract

Christian universalism, or the theory of universal salvation, is increasingly popular among religious thinkers. A small group of scholars has put forward the contentious claim that Kierkegaard was a universalist, despite that he refers in places to the idea of eternal damnation as essential to Christianity. This paper examines the evidence both for and against the view that Kierkegaard was a universalist and concludes that despite Kierkegaard’s occasional references to the importance of the idea of eternal damnation to Christianity, there is reason to believe that Kierkegaard may have been a universalist, both in terms of the substance of his thought, including two unequivocal statements in his journals that he believed everyone would eventually be saved and in terms of his rhetorical style which prioritizes the effect his writings would have on the reader over the literal truth of the views they present.

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Marilyn Gaye Piety
Drexel University

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Erindringer om Sören Kierkegaard.St Johansen - 1982 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 44 (4):738-738.

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