Theologian Thomas J. J. Altizer became both famous and infamous as the chief spokesman for death-of-God theology in the 1960s. In the years that followed, he has created a theological tradition that has influenced all succeeding generations of theologians. Living the Death of God is Altizer’s theological memoir. Taking us from his transformation as a theological student to his present life of solitude, Altizer recapitulates the voyage to create a truly new theology. The memoir recounts each stage of this voyage, from being overwhelmed by Satan to a conversion to the death of God and an extensive and even ecstatic preaching of the death of God. However, this is the death of that God who is the wholly alienated God, a death realizing anew the crucified God or the apocalyptic Christ.
Written with Altizer’s characteristic elegance, this book is fascinating on its own account, but can also serve the reader as a companion or introduction to Altizer’s body of work.
Table of Content
Preface
Foreword: The Last Theologian
Mark C. Taylor
1. The Calling
2. New York
3. Epic Theology
4. Initiation
5. Holocaust
6. Art
7. Yes and No
8. Crucifixion
9. Ethics
10. Predestination
11. Prayer
12. Absolute Abyss
13. Apocalypse
Index
About the author
Thomas J. J. Altizer is Professor Emeritus of Religious Studies at the State University of New York at Stony Brook. He is the author of a number of books, including
Godhead and the Nothing;
The Contemporary Jesus; and
History as Apocalypse (all published by SUNY Press);
The Genesis of God: A Theological Genealogy;
Radical Theology and the Death of God (with William Hamilton);
The Self-Embodiment of God; and
The Descent Into Hell: A Study of the Radical Reversal of the Christian Consciousness.