2010
DOI: 10.3138/tjt.26.2.173
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Deep Incarnation: Why Evolutionary Continuity Matters in Christology

Abstract: This article presents the idea of deep incarnation in outline. In dialogue with Wentzel van Huyssteen's interpretation of imago Dei and Christology on the one hand and with Arne Næss's notion of deep ecology on the other hand, it is claimed that evolutionary continuity is as important for Christology as is the evolutionary distinctiveness of the human species. Without a strong continuity between the historical figure of Jesus and the cosmos at large, we end up in a culturally confined Christology. But without … Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…"In this perspective, the incarnation of the Son of God is not only an event associated with the birth of Jesus, but also a process that extends through the life story of Jesus and ends in his death." 31 This implies God's deep presence in evolutionary history, and avoids otherwise common anthropocentric misconceptions of the incarnation. More specifically, evolutionary continuity-that human beings are part of a larger phylogenetic tree of lifeis important to the incarnation and thus to the Triune God.…”
Section: Theology Of Deep Incarnationmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…"In this perspective, the incarnation of the Son of God is not only an event associated with the birth of Jesus, but also a process that extends through the life story of Jesus and ends in his death." 31 This implies God's deep presence in evolutionary history, and avoids otherwise common anthropocentric misconceptions of the incarnation. More specifically, evolutionary continuity-that human beings are part of a larger phylogenetic tree of lifeis important to the incarnation and thus to the Triune God.…”
Section: Theology Of Deep Incarnationmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…This paper is in keeping with that strand of the Christian tradition, although Gregersen's work is admittedly worthy of engagement in another context. See (Gregersen 2010). 14 (Bonting 2003, 593).…”
Section: The General Question: Cosmic Scope and The Assumption Of Stamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Gregersen's version of the cosmic cross is called deep incarnation , according to which the decensus of Jesus includes incarnating within the life of God the entirety of material existence: nature as known to biology, chemistry, and physics. Deep incarnation means that “the divine Logos…has assumed not merely humanity, but the whole malleable matrix of materiality ” (Gregersen , 176, Gregersen's italics).…”
Section: Theology Of the Cross In Three Manifestationsmentioning
confidence: 99%