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Schelling and Luther

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EN
Although it would be a stretch to consider FWJ Schelling a Lutheran, he shared some critical features of Luther’s critical engagement with Catholicism. This essay engages this mutual confrontation, and then discusses the new horizon, what Schelling dubs the Johanine Church, the church for everyone and everything, that is the latent promise of the Lutheran (and Pauline) confrontation with the Petrine (or Catholic) Church. As such, this essay is an exercise in what Schelling called philosophical religion, a fruit of his late turn to positive philosophy.
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Roczniki Filozoficzne
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2019
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vol. 67
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issue 1
83-95
PL
W artykule podejmuję próbę modyfikacji stanowiska zwanego „teizmem sceptycznym”. Powstało ono jako odpowiedź na dwa najpoważniejsze argumenty przeciwko istnieniu Boga: „argument ze zła” oraz „argument z ukrycia”. Tekst stanowi próbę udzielenia odpowiedzi na pytania: czym teizm sceptyczny różni się od innych postaci teizmu? Czy „teizm sceptyczny” stanowi krok naprzód w radzeniu sobie z problemem zła i problemem ukrycia? Czy da się w taki sposób zmodyfikować „teizm sceptyczny”, aby zdolny był objąć indywidualne przypadki doświadczenia zła i poczucia, że Bóg jest nieobecny? „Zindywidualizowany teizm sceptyczny”, który proponuję, nie tylko zawiera wszystkie nowe elementy, które „teizm sceptyczny” wniósł do dyskusji nad problemem zła i problemem ukrycia, lecz zabezpiecza także element indywidualności, który jest obecny w zmaganiu się każdego człowieka z tymi problemami. Pozwala także nakreślić strategie, które mogą się okazać przydatne dla zwolenników teizmu, z których najistotniejszą jest świadectwo własnego zmagania się z problemem zła i problemem ukrycia.
EN
In the paper I propose a modification of the position called “Skeptical Theism.” It was created as a response to two most serious arguments against the existence of God: “the argument from evil” and “the argument from hiddenness.” The paper attempts to answer the questions: how sceptical theism differs from other forms of theism? Is “Skeptical Theism” a step forward in dealing with the problem of evil and the problem of hiddenness? Is it possible to modify “skeptical theism” in such a way that it is able to cover individual cases of experiencing evil and the feeling that God is absent. “Individualized Skeptical Theism” that I propose not only contains all the new elements that “Skeptical Theism” has brought to the discussion of the problem of evil and the problem of hiddenness, but also secures the element of individuality that is present in every person’s struggle with these problems. It also allows us to outline strategies that may prove useful for supporters of theism, the most important of which is the testimony of one’s own struggle with the problem of evil and the problem of hiddenness.
EN
Referring to the concept of “hidden God” – Deus absconditus has become very popular today. In contemporary philosophical-religious literature, theories built around this concept can often be found. I believe that the reference to this concept has a special meaning in our times. In my paper I will reconstruct the patterns of the “stages of gods’ life” in archaic religions. Against this background, referring to a few examples from the history of philosophical-religious thought, I will show the reasons why the concept of “hidden God” in the Judaeo-Christian tradition is conceived.  Finally, referring to three contemporary discussions on the question of God’s existence, I will show what role the concept of Deus absconditus plays in contemporary Judeo-Christian thought.
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