Skip to the main content

Professional paper

Violence in the Bible and Dramatic Theology

Željko Tanjić orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-5188-8391 ; Catholic University of Croatia, Zagreb, Croatia
Bruno Petrušić orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-9275-8497 ; Catholic Faculty of Theology, University of Split, Split, Croatia


Full text: croatian pdf 121 Kb

page 93-103

downloads: 1.430

cite


Abstract

Contemporary society demonstrates a largely justifiable trend toward the rejection and condemnation of violence in any form which today is simply not acceptable. This article reexamines the relation of Christianity toward the violence contained within the pages of Holy Scripture and presents a direction taken in theological reflection of
the same which the Croatian theological milieu is insufficiently acquainted with. The first section deals with the issue of violence in the Bible, particularly how it is understood today, and introduces some relatively new ways of reading the Bible. Primarily, this applies to reading the French anthropologist René Girard. In the second section the study briefly presents Jesuit Raymund Schwager’s project of dramatic theology. Dramatic theology reads salvation history as a drama, the author of which is God, but with characters that possess a certain dose of autonomy. The climax of the drama as well as the key to a correct reading of it in its entirety is the event of Jesus Christ.

Keywords

violence; Bible; dramatic theology; revelation; salvation history; drama

Hrčak ID:

94048

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/94048

Publication date:

15.1.2013.

Article data in other languages: croatian

Visits: 2.995 *