Abstract

Abstract Framing a discussion of social space and the possibility of theological reflection and action, the article utilizes Moltmann, Nussbaum and Joost to argue that there is a space for God within social spaces. The author develops his argument in five separate theses dealing with social spaces as behavioral premises before turning in his final four theses to more theological reflections on the social space of the heterotopic Golgotha, the space of the Kingdom of God, the interaction of social and Kingdom space, and an interpretation of social space as creational.

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