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Dynamics of Hope: Eternal Life and Daily Christian Living | 
enlarge | Author: Charlotte Joy Martin Publisher: The Liturgical Press Category: Book
Buy New: $12.95
New (19) Used (12) from $1.69
Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 2995080
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 126 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6 x 0.3
ISBN: 0814651151 Dewey Decimal Number: 236.2 EAN: 9780814651155 ASIN: 0814651151
Publication Date: August 2002 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Does a hope of eternal life fit into daily Christian living? In Dynamics of Hope, Charlotte Joy Martin pursues questions that touch on the relationship between the Churchs fellowship and its hope of eternal life. In ordinary conversation imaginary escapes from everyday living often masquerade as "hope," but true hope involves seeing what one hopes for intersect present reality. Confusion over hope confuses everything about the relationship between eternal life and everyday living: ideas about the Church, sin and redemption, God, Jesus, worship, love, and, eternal life itself. Conversely, clearer thinking about hope allows clearer thinking on all of these issues. After clarifying hope itself, Dynamics of Hope identifies questions and applies lessons learned about eternal life and everyday living that arise regarding hope. Chapter one discusses how hope always accompanies some particular situation in which what one hopes for is already on its way. Chapter two asks such questions as "How does the Church render valid a hope of eternal life?" In chapter three the question becomes that of what the hoped-for-eternal life is like. It focuses on the Church Jesus inaugurated, the community to which a hope of eternal life belongs, and looks at Jesus secondarily as the inaugurator of this community. Chapter four asks "Will eternal life mean heaven for some and hell for others, or heaven for all, or something else?" Finally, chapter five describes how the coming of life eternal gives new meaning to life here and now.
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| Customer Reviews:
Brisk Mental Exercise June 25, 2006 The author of this work, Charlotte J. Martin, Ph.D., is a professor of religious studies writing for graduate students, preachers, adult education groups, and those who read theology for personal enjoyment. She promises her audience an experience akin to "taking the mind for a good brisk walk."
Though I do not fit the profile of the target audience, I found the chapter on heaven, hell, purgatory, and last judgment particularly enlightening. I will present some of the points I gleaned as a taste of what is in store for those who accept the author's invitation to that brisk mental walk.
Martin asks if "heaven" and "hell" are the right ideas for eternal life. She examines the views of theologians Karl Rahner and Paul Tillich on the subject, pointing out their differing definitions of good and evil choices. Rahner believes choices always turn one completely toward or completely against God; Tillich believes all choices are a mix of evil and goodness. Martin then reviews Tillich's theory that in eternal life, God strips away the evil elements from one's life choices, leaving only unambiguous good. Of this "re-creation" by God, Martin writes, "As much as one's actions lacked goodness, one's re-created self will regret. But the unambiguous goodness of this re-created self will make one happy to regret the evil in one's deeds, happy to praise God's goodness through that regret."
Clearly this resource calls for study, not simple reading. The uninitiated who are willing to accept the challenge might form a group and tackle one chapter at a time, perhaps with someone trained in theology as a guide.
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