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Gathering Those Driven Away: A Theology of Incarnation

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This book is a powerful expression of Jesus Christ given in the midst of the brokenness and hostilities of this world, as experienced by those who are marginalized and persecuted in contemporary society. Drawing on broader sources in the Christian tradition, Farley maintains the power of Jesus of Nazareth as the expression of the Divine Eros in Wisdom, to break powers of sin, and provide a vision of life, which is an alternative Empire to present ways and where love reigns as norm.

256 pages, Paperback

First published September 12, 2011

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Wendy Farley

11 books8 followers

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for E..
Author 1 book35 followers
July 18, 2012
In college we read Wendy Farley's book Tragic Vision and Divine Compassion: A Contemporary Theodicy and it was transformative in my thinking. Every now and then I've Googled to see if Farley published anything else. I guess I hadn't done it in a few years, as she published something a few years go that I missed. This book received attention and review in The Christian Century, and I quickly ordered it.

I had trouble engaging in the opening chapters. The writing style was denser than her previous work. I found much of it to repeat things I've read already in various other works (something that is making it easier and easier to read many theology books, because I can skim quickly).

But I also wasn't completely engaged by her apophatic theology of the divine. She stands in a long, strong tradition of those who insist we do not know about God. I am not opposed to this tradition, but I didn't find her presentation engaging. Where I did, she was usually quoting Catherine Keller, whose book On the Mystery I recently read and loved. I couldn't agree with her contention that the Divine is unlike any other object in the universe; a key part of Process thought is that God is an actual entity like other actual entities and must also abide by cosmic metaphysical conditions and categories. I find this important and though I do embrace divinity as mystery, I can't follow the via negativa as far as she does.

Her chapter on the Ten Commandments was great, and I've blogged on that already. I will definitely be using her when I next preach on them. The chapters on Jesus don't present anything new, and I was bored by some of the chapters on contemplation.

She has helped me recover the role of wisdom in theology. God is, for her, primarily experienced as divine wisdom and the spiritual task is to cultivate that wisdom through spiritual practices such as contemplation. In this way we incarnate wisdom, following Jesus. When we do incarnate divine wisdom following Jesus, we will be more inclusive and welcoming of the outcast and the oppressed. She places particular emphasis on queer issues. That's a quick summary of the book, by the way.

Because of the emphasis on the apophatic tradition and God as divine wisdom cultivated through spiritual practice, there is great opportunity for interfaith connection in her work. She does not ignore the particularities of the Christian tradition, and she even embraces traditional doctrines of the the Trinity, incarnation, and resurrection, so one has a good example of how these orthodox doctrines can lead in radically different theological directions.

She does some interesting things in this book that I will continue to think about, and over time I may revise my opinion upward. We'll see if I return to the book often and how those ideas she presents develop for me.
Profile Image for Deborah-Ruth.
Author 1 book10 followers
April 13, 2022
I have such a love-hate relationship with this book. On the one hand it provided a unique understanding of Christology, on the other, I felt it very much had an agenda. It was poetically written with lots of rabbit trails, but there was still beauty and advocacy in what she said. I am torn about about how I feel about it.
Profile Image for Victoria Gaile.
232 reviews19 followers
maybe
October 13, 2013
"For me, the genesis of theology is pain. When my heart is broken, I expect theology to walk with me… Theology is an academic discipline, a handmaid of the church, a doctrinal tradition. But it is also sapientia. It is longing for wisdom: pain seeking understanding." - quotation from this book in a blog post by Brandy Daniels
Profile Image for steds.
462 reviews11 followers
November 18, 2014
Good for my purposes, she loses me at the tragic vision of protestants. also wouldn't read without queer theo background and/or her work on divine eros or that will throw you off.
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