Freedom, Responsibility, and Religion in Public Life: From Luther to Levinas and Arendt

While Luther affirmed the believer’s freedom in relation to the world, he described the human being as unfree in relation to God from whom we receive everything and without whom we can achieve nothing good. This article reconsiders the relation between autonomy and heteronomy in the context of a phe...

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Main Author: Welz Claudia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2018-09-01
Series:Open Theology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/opth-2018-0034
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author Welz Claudia
author_facet Welz Claudia
author_sort Welz Claudia
collection DOAJ
description While Luther affirmed the believer’s freedom in relation to the world, he described the human being as unfree in relation to God from whom we receive everything and without whom we can achieve nothing good. This article reconsiders the relation between autonomy and heteronomy in the context of a phenomenology of listening: if faith comes from listening (ex auditu) and auditus is not a human capacity, but rather the effect of God’s Word that operates within the human being, how is our (un)freedom to be understood? Further, if a human being’s self-relation is expressed by the ‘voice’ of conscience, which can be ignored only at the cost of losing the unity with oneself, how is responsibility to be conceptualized when the call comes both from ‘within’ and from ‘without’? Finally, what are the implications of this view of the person for the role of religion in public life and the ways in which religious conflicts can be resolved? In an anachronistic thought experiment, Luther is brought into a posthumous dialogue with those that he excluded from the discussion: the Jews. In particular, his view concerning the justmentioned questions is contrasted with insights by Emmanuel Levinas and Hannah Arendt.
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spelling doaj.art-77b54cd94dfa431aa4122e399ea527492022-12-21T19:15:49ZengDe GruyterOpen Theology2300-65792018-09-014142844910.1515/opth-2018-0034opth-2018-0034Freedom, Responsibility, and Religion in Public Life: From Luther to Levinas and ArendtWelz Claudia0University of Copenhagen,Nørregade, DenmarkWhile Luther affirmed the believer’s freedom in relation to the world, he described the human being as unfree in relation to God from whom we receive everything and without whom we can achieve nothing good. This article reconsiders the relation between autonomy and heteronomy in the context of a phenomenology of listening: if faith comes from listening (ex auditu) and auditus is not a human capacity, but rather the effect of God’s Word that operates within the human being, how is our (un)freedom to be understood? Further, if a human being’s self-relation is expressed by the ‘voice’ of conscience, which can be ignored only at the cost of losing the unity with oneself, how is responsibility to be conceptualized when the call comes both from ‘within’ and from ‘without’? Finally, what are the implications of this view of the person for the role of religion in public life and the ways in which religious conflicts can be resolved? In an anachronistic thought experiment, Luther is brought into a posthumous dialogue with those that he excluded from the discussion: the Jews. In particular, his view concerning the justmentioned questions is contrasted with insights by Emmanuel Levinas and Hannah Arendt.https://doi.org/10.1515/opth-2018-0034autonomy/heteronomyfaithsindoubtlisteningobedienceresponsivenessconsciencegod’s word
spellingShingle Welz Claudia
Freedom, Responsibility, and Religion in Public Life: From Luther to Levinas and Arendt
Open Theology
autonomy/heteronomy
faith
sin
doubt
listening
obedience
responsiveness
conscience
god’s word
title Freedom, Responsibility, and Religion in Public Life: From Luther to Levinas and Arendt
title_full Freedom, Responsibility, and Religion in Public Life: From Luther to Levinas and Arendt
title_fullStr Freedom, Responsibility, and Religion in Public Life: From Luther to Levinas and Arendt
title_full_unstemmed Freedom, Responsibility, and Religion in Public Life: From Luther to Levinas and Arendt
title_short Freedom, Responsibility, and Religion in Public Life: From Luther to Levinas and Arendt
title_sort freedom responsibility and religion in public life from luther to levinas and arendt
topic autonomy/heteronomy
faith
sin
doubt
listening
obedience
responsiveness
conscience
god’s word
url https://doi.org/10.1515/opth-2018-0034
work_keys_str_mv AT welzclaudia freedomresponsibilityandreligioninpubliclifefromluthertolevinasandarendt