This volume presents reflections on the nature of Christian spirituality in the light of Immanuel Kant’s work
Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysic of Morals. It also contains two short comments on Kant’s work: Paul Tillich directly engages Kant’s moral philosophy, and Reinhold Niebuhr indirectly addresses him with his reflections on the role of conscience in religious experience. The whole volume rests on the constituent role that morality, and hence ethics, plays in a comprehensive understanding of Christian spirituality. Kant adds to that discussion by introducing the voice of the Enlightenment into the conversation. His work serves as a bridge between the spirituality displayed in the Medieval and Reformation periods and what may be called modern Western culture. Christians who are socialized into twenty-first century Western intellectual culture may be relatively unfamiliar with the cultures that spawned the characteristic accents of the spiritual languages that are learned in the churches today. When they move into the world of higher education, they will learn a whole series of ideas from science and critical modern thought that directly challenge the ordinary spiritual conceptions of church traditions. The critical discussion between intellectual culture and Christianity during the period of the Enlightenment was deep and serious, and it helps to explain how the churches in the West relate to present-day intellectual culture. Kant’s text on the metaphysics of morals presents in an exemplary way the deep questions that Christian spirituality faces today with almost laboratory precision. The two commentators neatly draw the conversation into contexts that are closer to life in the world of our time.
Tabella dei contenuti
I—Introduction to the Authors and Texts | 1
II—The Texts | 19
Immanuel Kant on the Metaphysic of Morals:
An Edited Selection of Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysic of Morals | 21
Paul Tillich on Morality and Religion:
“The Religious Dimension of the Moral Imperative” | 77
Reinhold Niebuhr on Conscience:
An Excerpt from The Nature and Destiny of Man | 91
III—Enlightened Spirituality in Post-Enlightenment Cultures | 103
Further Reading | 123
About the Series | 125
About the Editors | 131
Circa l’autore
Amanda Avila Kaminski is an Assistant Professor of Theology at Texas Lutheran University, where she also serves as Director of the program in Social Innovation and Social Entrepreneurship. She has written extensively in the area of Christian spirituality.