Abstract

For the postfoundationalist Wentzel van Huyssteen, the James I McCord Professor of Theology and Science at Princeton Theological Seminary, USA, the problem of rationality has been the dominant and persuasive theme of his scholarship for more than three decades. ‘To understand understanding’ can be the shorthand description of his scholarly quest. In his published Gifford Lectures, Alone in the World? (2006), he explores from an interdisciplinary perspective the concept of human uniqueness and the imago Dei – an exercise in transversal reasoning as he calls it. It is an exercise that according to Van Huyssteen, stems from the conviction that evolutionary epistemology creates a natural space for postfoundationalism, and that transversal reasoning represents the performative praxis of postfoundationalism. The question immediately arises from this exciting and promising interdisciplinary exercise, if and how the concept of revelation which represents (in most religions) a constitutive element of religious experience can be understood from a postfoundational perspective as an exercise in transversal reasoning. Against the background of a limited overview of contemporary influential models of revelation, as well as brief notes on natural theology, I will make use of Ricoeur’s a-religious understanding of revelation as theological interlocutor for this critical dialogue with Van Huyssteen. Finally I will formulate a tentative framework within which the concept of ‘revelation’ can be re-imagined from an interdisciplinary perspective so that it can be part of the post-modern theology-science conversation in such a manner to maintain its identity without retreating to an esoteric world of private, insular knowledge claims.

Highlights

  • In his short article on ‘Revelation’ in the Encyclopedia of Science and Religion, Christopher Knight comes to the following conclusion: It is perhaps in the context of postfoundationalist understandings of rationality that the concept of revelation will most markedly affect the dialogue of science and theology in the near future

  • I will look at the exciting recent contribution of Wentzel van Huyssteen that stems from his postfoundationalist approach, and against this background, propose a tentative framework within which the concept of revelation can be re-imagined from a postfoundationalist perspective

  • This model is characteristic of the German dialectical school of theology influenced by the dialogical personalism of Buber in which revelation is understood as a personal communication of God

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Summary

Original Research

Affiliation: 1Department of Dogmatics and Christian Ethics, University of Pretoria, South Africa. Postal address: Department of Dogmatics and Christian Ethics, Faculty of Theology, University of Pretoria, Hatfield, 0083, South Africa. How to cite this article: Veldsman, D.P., 2009, ‘Interdisciplinary reimagining of the concept of revelation’, HTS Teologiese Studies/ Theological Studies 65(1), Art.

INTRODUCTION
Introduction
Paul Ricoeur
Revelation and natural theology
WHAT HAVE OUR GENES TO DO WITH BELIEF?
Wentzel van Huyssteen
Full Text
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