“I Will Show You My Faith by My Works”: Addressing the Nexus between Philosophical Theodicy and Human Suffering and Loss in Contexts of ‘Natural’ Disaster

As a practical theologian and researcher in the field of ‘natural’ disasters, as well as being a disaster responder chaplain, I am often confronted by, and have to confront, the nexus between theology/philosophy and “real life„ in extremely traumatic contexts....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Roger Philip Abbott
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-03-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/10/3/213
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spelling doaj-858a8cb934394f40a232eea85bfa86e32020-11-24T21:44:24ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442019-03-0110321310.3390/rel10030213rel10030213“I Will Show You My Faith by My Works”: Addressing the Nexus between Philosophical Theodicy and Human Suffering and Loss in Contexts of ‘Natural’ DisasterRoger Philip Abbott0The Faraday Institute for Science & Religion, Cambridge Theological Federation, The Woolf Building, Madingley Road, Cambridge CB3 0U, UKAs a practical theologian and researcher in the field of ‘natural’ disasters, as well as being a disaster responder chaplain, I am often confronted by, and have to confront, the nexus between theology/philosophy and “real life„ in extremely traumatic contexts. The extreme suffering that is often the consequence of catastrophic natural disasters warrants solutions that can help vulnerable populations recover and adapt to live safely with natural hazards. For many practice-based responders, speculative theological/philosophical reflections around situations that are often human-caused seem predominantly vacuous exercises, potentially diverting attention away from the empiricism of causal human agency. In this article, I explore a middle ground involving a nuanced methodological approach to theodicy that is practical but no less intellectually demanding, that is theological more than philosophical, practical more than theoretical; a middle ground that also takes seriously the human culpability as causal for the human, and some would say the divine, suffering from disasters. I will include in this exploration my ethnographic fieldwork following the catastrophic earthquake to hit the Caribbean nation of Haiti in 2010.https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/10/3/213disastersufferingevilpractical theologyphilosophical theodicypractical theodicyanthropodicysocial justice
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Roger Philip Abbott
spellingShingle Roger Philip Abbott
“I Will Show You My Faith by My Works”: Addressing the Nexus between Philosophical Theodicy and Human Suffering and Loss in Contexts of ‘Natural’ Disaster
Religions
disaster
suffering
evil
practical theology
philosophical theodicy
practical theodicy
anthropodicy
social justice
author_facet Roger Philip Abbott
author_sort Roger Philip Abbott
title “I Will Show You My Faith by My Works”: Addressing the Nexus between Philosophical Theodicy and Human Suffering and Loss in Contexts of ‘Natural’ Disaster
title_short “I Will Show You My Faith by My Works”: Addressing the Nexus between Philosophical Theodicy and Human Suffering and Loss in Contexts of ‘Natural’ Disaster
title_full “I Will Show You My Faith by My Works”: Addressing the Nexus between Philosophical Theodicy and Human Suffering and Loss in Contexts of ‘Natural’ Disaster
title_fullStr “I Will Show You My Faith by My Works”: Addressing the Nexus between Philosophical Theodicy and Human Suffering and Loss in Contexts of ‘Natural’ Disaster
title_full_unstemmed “I Will Show You My Faith by My Works”: Addressing the Nexus between Philosophical Theodicy and Human Suffering and Loss in Contexts of ‘Natural’ Disaster
title_sort “i will show you my faith by my works”: addressing the nexus between philosophical theodicy and human suffering and loss in contexts of ‘natural’ disaster
publisher MDPI AG
series Religions
issn 2077-1444
publishDate 2019-03-01
description As a practical theologian and researcher in the field of ‘natural’ disasters, as well as being a disaster responder chaplain, I am often confronted by, and have to confront, the nexus between theology/philosophy and “real life„ in extremely traumatic contexts. The extreme suffering that is often the consequence of catastrophic natural disasters warrants solutions that can help vulnerable populations recover and adapt to live safely with natural hazards. For many practice-based responders, speculative theological/philosophical reflections around situations that are often human-caused seem predominantly vacuous exercises, potentially diverting attention away from the empiricism of causal human agency. In this article, I explore a middle ground involving a nuanced methodological approach to theodicy that is practical but no less intellectually demanding, that is theological more than philosophical, practical more than theoretical; a middle ground that also takes seriously the human culpability as causal for the human, and some would say the divine, suffering from disasters. I will include in this exploration my ethnographic fieldwork following the catastrophic earthquake to hit the Caribbean nation of Haiti in 2010.
topic disaster
suffering
evil
practical theology
philosophical theodicy
practical theodicy
anthropodicy
social justice
url https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/10/3/213
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