Eternity and Eternal Life: Speculative Theology and Science in Discourse

Front Cover
Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press, 1993 M11 15 - 174 pages

The Newtonian concept of time has been changed by Einsteinian insight. Yet the Einsteinian world view might make it difficult to appreciate traditional concepts of eschatology, like heaven and hell, death and immortality, life after death and resurrection, last day and final judgments, because these expressions presuppose a pre-Einsteinian view of the universe. Since theology cannot remain unaffected by the new research in concepts of time, Eternity and Eternal Life tries to express the eschatological faith of the Church by using the time language of our age. To achieve this it provides an overview on the research in the nature of time done in geology, cosmology, physics, biology, psychology, sociology, history and philosophy and proposes a notion of time for “timely” Christology and for “timely” eschatology.

By using the singularity event as literary form, Horvath scrutinizes how Christ’s time can lead to the times of all existing realities, through death to “eternity.” This is a pioneering work, one that needs to be tested in the community of interested readers. It is a communal search for an understanding of life, death and eternal life, not only in the light of abstract ideas and cultural linguistic doctrines in the world of religions, but also in the light of science and especially of a person as the horizon of understanding for both time and eternity. Christ as the eschatological union of time and eternity becomes the work’s unifying focus and its paradigm, which solves recognized problems and opens our minds to new ones.

 

Contents

1 INTRODUCTION
1
2 CONCEPTS OF TIME
27
JESUS CHRIST THE ESCHATOLOGICAL UNION OF TIME AND ETERNITY
65
SYSTEMATIC PRESENTATION
81
5 CONCLUSION
155

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 10 - When they persecute you in one town, flee to the next; for truly, I say to you, you will not have gone through all the towns of Israel, before the Son of man comes.

About the author (1993)

Tibor Horvath was born in Hungary, studied in Austria, Italy, Leuven (M.A., L. Phil.), Germany, Granada, Spain (S.T.L.), Rome (S.T.D.), Chicago and entered the Society of Jesus in Budapest in 1946. He was ordained to the priesthood in Grenada in 1956. He has been Professor of Systematic Theology at Regis College in Toronto since 1962 and at the Toronto School of Theology since 1968. He is the author of several books and articles, founder and editor of the journal Ultimate Reality and Meaning: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Philosophy of Understanding and recipient of DBH Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft.

Bibliographic information