A collection of essays that outline the recent work on ecology, political theology, religion, and philosophy by one of the leading theologians of our age
As we face relentless ecological destruction spiraling around a planet of unconstrained capitalism and democratic failure, what matters most? How do we get our bearings and direct our priorities in such a terrestrial scenario? Species, race, sex, politics, and economics will increasingly come tangled in the catastrophic trajectory of climate change. With a sense of urgency and of possibility, Catherine Keller’s No Matter What reflects multiple trajectories of planetary crisis. They converge from a point of view formed of the political ecologies of a transdisciplinary theological pluralism. In its work an ancient symbolism of apocalypse deconstructs end-of-the-world narratives, Christian and secular, even as any notion of an all-controlling and good God collapses under the force of internal contradiction. In the place of a once-for-all incarnation, the materiality of unbounded intercarnation, of fragile yet animating relations of mattering earth-bodies, comes into focus.
The essays of No Matter What share the preoccupation with matter characteristic of the so-called new materialism. They also root in an older ecotheological tradition, one that has long struggled against the undead legacy of an earth-betraying theology that, with the aid of its white Christian right wing, invests the denigration of matter, its spirit of “no matter, ” in limitless commodification. The fragile alternative Keller outlines here embraces—no matter what—the mattering of the life of the Earth and of all its spirited bodies. These essays, struggling against Christian and secular betrayals of the spirited matter of Earth, work to materialize the still possible planetary healing.
Table of Content
Introduction | 1
PART I: Dis/Closures of Democracy and Earth | 9
1 Creeps of the Apocalypse: Climate, Capital, Democracy | 11
2 The “We” of Catastrophe, the Throb of Cosmogony: Eco-Thinking with Sylvia Wynter | 25
3 Political Theologies at War: A Virtual Talk with Students in Ukraine | 35
4 Apocalypse After All? Climate, Politics, and Faith in the Possible | 50
PART II: Power and Its Alternatives | 63
5 Nationalism and a New Religion: Foxangelicals and the Agonism of an Alternative | 65
6 Power, Theodicy, and the Amipotent God | 77
7 Weakness, Folly, Insistence, Glory: The Phenomenal God of John D. Caputo | 87
8 Poiesis of the Earth: “A Black and Living Thing” | 100
PART III: Love-tangles of Theology | 107
9 Amorous Entanglements: The Matter of Intercarnation | 109
10 “Birds with Wings Outspread”: Islam, Christianity, and the Earth | 122
11 Animality, Animacy, Anima Mundi: Toward an Age of Enlivenment | 133
12 Dear Young Theologian | 145
Acknowledgments | 153
Notes | 155
Index | 179
About the author
Catherine Keller is George T. Cobb Professor of Constructive Theology in The Graduate Division of Religion, Drew University. She works amid the tangles of ecosocial, pluralist, feminist philosophy of religion and theology. Her books include Face of the Deep: A Theology of Becoming; On the Mystery; Cloud of the Impossible: Negative Theology and Planetary Entanglement; Political Theology of the Earth: Our Planetary Emergency and the Struggle for a New Public. She has co-edited several volumes of the Drew Transdisciplinary Theological Colloquium, most recently Political Theology on Edge: Ruptures of Justice and Belief in the Anthropocene. Her latest monograph is Facing Apocalypse: Climate, Democracy, and Other Last Chances.