By critically engaging Eberhard J?ngel's doctrine of the Trinity, this volume makes a broader, constructive contribution to contemporary trinitarian thought.The argument centers on the question - posed by the inconsistencies uncovered in J?ngel's doctrine of God - of how one can assert both divine freedom and the inter-subjectivity of God's trinitarian self-determination. Can one maintain God's freedom in the interest of divine spontaneity and creativity, while remaining committed to inter-subjective vulnerability which the Cross entails as an event of divine love?
Malysz suggests that a resolution to this problem lies in a logic of divine freedom, which, next to the trinitarian logic of love, constitutes a different and simultaneous mode of trinitarian relationality. To develop this logic, Malysz draws on J?ngel's understanding of human freedom as rooted in the elemental interruption of the self-securing subject. Malysz thus not only brings J?ngel's view of divine freedom into correspondence with the anthropological effects that J?ngel ascribes to it, but, above all, offers an imaginative, new way of closely integrating the doctrine of God and theological anthropology.
Introduction
Chapter 1: Human Relationality and Unfreedom
Chapter 2: The Contradictions of Divine Freedom
Chapter 3: Freedom as Interruption of the Continuity of Being
Chapter 4: The Trinitarian Logic of Freedom
Conclusion
Piotr J. Malyszis Assistant Professor of Divinity, Beeson Divinity School, Samford University, Birmingham, USA.