1. Divine wrath and human anger: embarrassment ancient and new
- Author
-
McCarthy, Michael C.
- Subjects
God -- Attributes ,Anger -- Portrayals ,Authors -- Beliefs, opinions and attitudes ,Violence -- Religious aspects -- Portrayals ,Philosophy and religion ,Beliefs, opinions and attitudes ,Analysis ,Portrayals - Abstract
The author argues that embarrassment over references to divine wrath in more recent times reflects a similar embarrassment or at least ambivalence among writers, pagan and Christian, in Late Antiquity. Patristic writers were especially sensitive to the ways human rage could inform Scripture readers' understanding of divine wrath. Although insisting that God's indignation was a component of divine justice, these writers employed a range of strategies to dissociate God from forms of violence generated by anger., THEOLOGIANS OF ALL GENERATIONS have betrayed discomfort with images of an angry God. In our own age, however, acutely aware of the ways religious sentiment can fuel and legitimate violence, [...]
- Published
- 2009