Ebook
If Schillebeeckx had been Asian, how would he have responded to the phenomenon of religious pluralism? This book attempts to answer that question, beginning with a dialogue with the Vatican Declaration Dominus Iesus and discerning how Schillebeeckx’s methodology has been applied in Asian theology. Employing the hermeneutical-critical method, Schillebeeckx asserts that the Word of God did not come “down to us, as it were, vertically in a purely divine statement"--it must be interpreted! In today’s context of so many religions, so many cultures, and so many poor, God’s Word invites the church to be a “sacrament of dialogue.” Through dialogue the church will be "challenged by other religions and challenge them in return.” Christianity will then be "put in its place, as well as given the place which is its due."
”A frank and articulate commentary on Dominus Iesus, this
volume offers reflections on the respectful and authentic
relationship between the Catholic Church and other religious
traditions. . . . What is intriguing is not only that it deals with
the greatest theological conundrum of our time, but also explores
how Western and Asian theologies can be bridged, mindful of the
aspirations of the wronged of this world."
--Bahar Davary
Associate Professor of Theology and Religious Studies, University
of San Diego
Author of Women and the Qur’an
“Combining the theology of Schillebeeckx and the experience of
religious diversity of the Asian churches, Chia takes on the
‘600-pound gorilla’ that stalks all Catholic conversations about
interreligious dialogue: the tensions between official Vatican
pronouncements such as Dominus Iesus and the views of
communities and theologians. Chia’s final proposal for an ‘Asian
theology of dialogue’ opens a way forward."
--Paul F. Knitter
Paul Tillich Professor of Theology, World Religions, and Culture,
Union Theological Seminary
Author of Without Buddha I Could Not Be a Christian
"Edmund Chia puts us all, especially Asian theologians, in his debt
with this scholarly analysis of the thought of one of the most
influential Catholic theologians of the twentieth century. Chia
brilliantly succeeds in extending Schillebeeckx’s insights into the
challenging field of cultural and interreligious dialogue. In this
way he builds a bridge between Western and Asian theologies, long
kept apart, or worse, with the former dominating the latter. Chia’s
work is proof that Asian theology has come of age."
--Peter C. Phan
Ellacuria Chair of Catholic Social Thought, Georgetown
University
Author of Being Religious Interreligiously