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Exclusion and Embrace: A Theological Exploration of Identity, Otherness, and Reconciliation is unavailable, but you can change that!

Life at the end of the twentieth century presents us with a disturbing reality. Otherness, the simple fact of being different in some way, has come to be defined as in and of itself evil. Miroslav Volf contends that if the healing word of the gospel is to be heard today, Christian theology must find ways of speaking that address the hatred of the other. Reaching back to the New Testament metaphor...

realization of the universal idea through the dialectic of the concrete; the Marxist narrative of emancipation from exploitation and alienation through the socialization of work; and the capitalist narrative of emancipation from poverty through technological development. Between these narratives there are grounds for litigation and even for difference. But in all of them, the givens arising from events are situated in the course of a history whose end, even if it remains beyond reach, is called universal