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Comparative Theology

Fifty years of ashram life: Reminiscences from jyotiniketan

Full Name (inc. titles): 
Rev. Dr Murray Rogers
Date: 
Friday, June 11, 2004 - 11:30
Location: 
First name (inc. titles): 
Rev. Dr Murray

Desire in Christianity and Indian religions

Full Name (inc. titles): 
Dr Ulrike Roesler
Date: 
Thursday, November 9, 2006 - 10:30
Location: 

Desire in its widest sense is fundamental to human existence and has been the focus of much discussion in religious traditions over the centuries. Desire has been seen as a negative quality which keeps people in bondage, as generally seen in Buddhism, but desire for a greater good has also been seen as a positive force in different traditions. The aim of this conference is explore the idea of desire and its understanding in Christianity and Indian religions and to generate discussion of comparative philosophy and theology across traditions.

First name (inc. titles): 
Dr Ulrike

Desire in Christianity and Indian religions

Full Name (inc. titles): 
Dr Dermot Killingley
Date: 
Thursday, November 9, 2006 - 10:15
Location: 

Desire in its widest sense is fundamental to human existence and has been the focus of much discussion in religious traditions over the centuries. Desire has been seen as a negative quality which keeps people in bondage, as generally seen in Buddhism, but desire for a greater good has also been seen as a positive force in different traditions. The aim of this conference is explore the idea of desire and its understanding in Christianity and Indian religions and to generate discussion of comparative philosophy and theology across traditions.

First name (inc. titles): 
Dr Dermot

Desire in Christianity and Indian religions

Full Name (inc. titles): 
Professor Keith Ward
Date: 
Thursday, November 9, 2006 - 10:15
Location: 

Desire in its widest sense is fundamental to human existence and has been the focus of much discussion in religious traditions over the centuries. Desire has been seen as a negative quality which keeps people in bondage, as generally seen in Buddhism, but desire for a greater good has also been seen as a positive force in different traditions. The aim of this conference is explore the idea of desire and its understanding in Christianity and Indian religions and to generate discussion of comparative philosophy and theology across traditions.

First name (inc. titles): 
Professor Keith

Icon and murti (four seminars)

Full Name (inc. titles): 
Dr Kenneth Valpey
Date: 
Thursday, January 25, 2007 - 10:15
Location: 

This seminar series will examine the issue of representation of the divine in Christian Orthodoxy and Vaisnava Hinduism. Given that God is unknowable and beyond all representation in these traditions, questions will be raised about how a transcendent reality can be represented, the function of such representations, and the degree to which such mediations are thought to be required by tradition.

First name (inc. titles): 
Dr Kenneth

Towards a comparative theology of the person

Lecture Type: 
Graduate seminar
Full Name (inc. titles): 
Nicholas Bamford
Date: 
Tuesday, February 27, 2007 - 10:00
Location: 

Comparative theology is an important area of research in the contemporary world. This paper will develop the idea of the person as a fruitful category for comparative theological inquiry. The seminar will raise questions about the person as an ontological category and its possible future development with particular reference to Saiva theology in dialogue with Orthodox Christianity.

First name (inc. titles): 
Nicholas

Beyond love and love beyond: Hindu and Western ideas of love

Lecture Type: 
Shivdasani Seminar
Full Name (inc. titles): 
Dr Sangeetha Menon
Date: 
Thursday, May 3, 2007 - 18:00
Location: 

The seminar will examine Hindu ideas of love and the idea of divine love ('love beyond'). The seminar will pay particular attention to the Narada Bhakti Sutras.

First name (inc. titles): 
Dr Sangeetha

Comparative theology as intellectual and spiritual practice

Full Name (inc. titles): 
Professor Francis X. Clooney, SJ
Date: 
Thursday, May 17, 2007 - 16:15
Location: 

The study of great religious texts demands much of the scholar, in part because such texts require professional linguistic and historical expertise, familiarity with the tradition in which the text arose, and a sense of the wider and often unstated context. But such religious texts also make demands on the reader, drawing him or her into thinking and feeling in specific ways about the topics discussed in the text. The reader then has to make choices about where, if anywhere, to draw a line between scholarly detachment and engaged participation.

First name (inc. titles): 
Professor Francis X.

Surrender to God in Islam, Christianity, and Hinduism-Professor Ward Talk

Lecture Type: 
Surrender to God in Islam, Christianity, and Hinduism
Full Name (inc. titles): 
Professor Keith Ward
Date: 
Thursday, January 24, 2008 - 12:00
Location: 

This afternoon conference examines the idea of surrender to God in three religions and provides the opportunity to address comparative theological concerns. In all three theistic traditions there is the idea of human surrender to God. The conference will explore what this means in the different traditions and look towards a theological dialogue between them.

First name (inc. titles): 
Professor Keith

Surrender to God in Islam, Christianity, and Hinduism-Professor Lipner Talk

Lecture Type: 
Surrender to God in Islam, Christianity, and Hinduism
Full Name (inc. titles): 
Professor Julius Lipner
Date: 
Thursday, January 24, 2008 - 12:00
Location: 

This afternoon conference examines the idea of surrender to God in three religions and provides the opportunity to address comparative theological concerns. In all three theistic traditions there is the idea of human surrender to God. The conference will explore what this means in the different traditions and look towards a theological dialogue between them.

First name (inc. titles): 
Professor Julius

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