Naming the Powers
- 181bladzijden
- 7 uur lezen
Deze serie volgt een groep gewone mensen die superkrachten krijgen en moeten leren leven met hun nieuwe vaardigheden en verantwoordelijkheden. Het verkent de morele dilemma's die gepaard gaan met macht en de gevolgen van heldhaftige daden op het dagelijks leven. Dit is een grimmige, realistische kijk op het superheldengenre, die ingaat op de psychologische en maatschappelijke gevolgen van bovenmenselijke vermogens. Lezers vinden er complexe personages en een doordacht onderzoek naar wat het betekent om een held te zijn.
Angels, Spirits, principalities, powers, gods, Satanthese, along with all other spiritual realities, are the unmentionables of our culture. The dominant materialistic worldview has absolutely no place for them. [But] materialism itself is terminably ill, and, let us hope, in process of replacement by a worldview capable of honoring the lasting values of modern science without succumbing to reductionism. [Therefore] we find ourselves returning to the ancient traditions, searching for wisdom wherever it may be found. We do not capitulate to the past and its superstitions, but bring all the gifts our race has acquired along the way as aids in recovering the lost language of our souls. In Naming the Powers I developed the thesis ... that the New Testament's principalities and powers" is a generic category referring to the determining forces of physical, psychic, and social existence. In the present volume we will be focusing on just seven of the Powers mentioned in Scripture. Their selection out of all the others dealt with in Naming the Powers is partly they happen to be ones about which I felt I had something to say. But they are also representative, and open the way to comprehending the rest. They Satan, demons, angels of churches, angels of nations, gods, elements, and angels of nature."
Wink explores the problem of evil today and how it relates to the New Testament concept of Principalities and Powers. He asks the question "How can we oppose evil without creating new evils and being made evil ourselves?"Winner of the Pax Christi Award, the Academy of Parish Clergy Book of the Year, and the Midwest Book Achievement Award for Best Religious Book.