A. J. Appasamy and his reading of Ramanuja : A comparative study in divine embodiment / Brian Philip Dunn
Material type:
- 9780198809739
- 230.092 DUN-B
Item type | Current library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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BITS Pilani Hyderabad | 200 | General Stack (For lending) | 230.092 DUN-B (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 34614 |
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230.015 McG-A Science of God : an introduction to scientific theology / | 230.0440 WAL-S Kierkegaard and religion : | 230.092 COB-J Christian natural theology : based on the thought of Alfred North Whitehead / | 230.092 DUN-B A. J. Appasamy and his reading of Ramanuja : | 231 HAR-C Omnipotence and other theological mistakes / | 231 YOU-W Lies we believe about God / | 231.5 BAR-D God, chance and purpose : can god have it both ways? |
In this work, Brian Philip Dunn focuses on the embodiment theology of the South Indian theologian, A. J. Appasamy (1891-1975). Appasamy developed what he called a 'bhakti' (devotional) approach to Christian theology, bringing his own primary text, the Gospel of John, into comparative interaction with the writings of the Hindu philosopher and theologian, Rāmānuja. Dunn's exposition here is of Appasamy's distinctive adaptation of Rāmānuja's 'Body of God' analogy and its application to a bhakti reading of John's Gospel. He argues throughout for the need to locate and understand theological language as embedded and embodied within the narrative and praxis of tradition and, for Appasamy and Rāmānuja, in their respective Anglican and 'Srivaiṣṇava settings. Responding to Appasamy, Dunn proposes that the primary Johannine referent for divine embodiment is the temple and considers recent scholarship on Johannine 'temple Christology' in light of 'Srivaiṣṇava conceptions of the temple and the temple deity. He then offers a constructive reading of the text as a temple procession, a heuristic device that can be newly considered in both comparative and devotional contexts today.
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