Alain Epp Weaver's recent book is the subject of an extensive discussion at the journal Syndicate, at which four authors will engage with Epp Weaver's book. Readers interested in this theopolitical conversation will be richly rewarded. Check back every few days for new essays. After the online versions have been posted, the essays will only be available in the print edition. The editor begins his introduction this way:
"Talking about Palestinian-Israeli affairs is very uncomfortable. It is a
practical matter of grave significance for contemporary foreign affairs
and a historical malaise of maddening perplexity; the lack of peace has
tragically grave consequences as we all learned this last July when
escalating violence between Israel and Hamas in Gaza led to the deaths
of over 2000 Palestinians in Gaza and 71 Israelis. The historical
complexity of the political reality is redoubled when the issues therein
are discussed as political-theological matters, mostly because
political theology itself is inherently awkward. Political theology
forces us to discuss topics that are gauche, uncouth, and imprudent:
violence, sovereignty, God, rights, and money. And so, one can be
forgiven for thinking that, if it is taken up as a political-theological
matter, any further discussion of the distance between Jewish,
Christian, and Muslim perspectives (not to mention the multiplicities
therein) about how to organize and arrange—that is, to map—their
collective futures, only promises to deepen the distrust, pain, and
dispossession."
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