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Lament, Death, and Destiny

by Richard A. Hughes (Author)
©2004 Monographs XX, 182 Pages
Series: Studies in Biblical Literature, Volume 68

Summary

Lament, a natural, healthy response to unfair suffering and death, has largely disappeared from modern life and thought. This book reaffirms ancient Greek and Hebrew conceptions of lament as a protest against death as fate. Richard A. Hughes finds lament to be basic in the Bible, and he traces the decline of lament, beginning with Plato’s antifeminist critique and early Christian theodicy, through the church fathers and the Protestant reformers. He shows that lament was displaced by classical doctrines of providence but recaptured in the modern existentialist revolt against unjust suffering. Hughes discusses the need for lament in the present age of mass, catastrophic death.

Details

Pages
XX, 182
Year
2004
ISBN (Hardcover)
9780820470962
Language
English
Keywords
Fate Revolt Suffering Providence
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2004. XX, 182 pp.

Biographical notes

Richard A. Hughes (Author)

The Author: Richard A. Hughes is the M.B. Rich Professor of Religion at Lycoming College in Williamsport, Pennsylvania. He received his Ph.D. in systematic theology at Boston University and studied in Geneva, Paris, and Tokyo. He has published seven books and many essays in the areas of ethics, depth psychology, and theology. His Return of the Ancestor (Peter Lang, 1992) won the Szondi Prize of Switzerland.

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Title: Lament, Death, and Destiny