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“All Will Be Well”: Julian of Norwich's Counter-Apocalyptic Revelations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 January 2013

Christopher Denny
Affiliation:
St. John's University

Abstract

To resolve the impasse between various competing apocalypticisms, I suggest the writings of Julian of Norwich exemplify an eschatology that incorporates features of what Catherine Keller calls counter-apocalyptic while avoiding the risks of deconstructionist theology. Julian faced an impasse as she struggled to reconcile the traditional apocalyptic claim of the church that some human beings were damned with her own revelatory experience that “all would be well.” According to the long text of the Revelation of Divine Love, in facing this crisis Julian did not abandon the belief in divine omnipotence. Like Keller's position, Julian's apophatic counter-apocalyptices chews understandings of Christiane eschatology as the simple disclosure of divine power and justice. Instead, Julian's counter-apocalyptic is founded upon the vulnerability of Christ's body. Julian's vision of Christ's kenotic love transcends the impasse between eschatological determinism and Keller's process theology, and his love establishes a stronger foundation for a truly liberating eschatology.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The College Theology Society 2011

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References

1 This article grew out of a paper given at the 2009 Catholic Theological Society of America annual meeting in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

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