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E-grāmata: Confucian Timely Mean and Christian Discernment: Confucian-Christian Dialogue for Spirituality of Discernment and Applied Ethics

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This book explores the notion of timely mean, a virtue established in the Confucian tradition, in dialogue with the Christian understanding of discernment, especially as used in spirituality studies.



This book explores the notion of the timely mean, a virtue established in the Confucian tradition, in dialogue with the Christian understanding of discernment, especially as used in spirituality studies. It considers the historical development of these concepts, addressing the early encounter between Confucianism and Christianity as demonstrated in China and Korea and the fusion of the two perspectives in the nineteenth century. The chapters examine some of the major scholars and texts that have influenced both theory and practice, providing insight through a comparison of representative figures from each tradition. The author contends that bringing the Confucian ‘timely mean’ into conversation with Christian ‘discernment’ reveals that the immense riches accumulated within each tradition can mutually enhance one another. The book reflects on the possibility of a viable process for ethical and spiritual discernment that is highly relevant for our global age. It is valuable reading for scholars and students of both Confucianism and Christian theology as well as of applied ethics, particularly those interested in comparative spirituality and interreligious relations.
Preface

1 Spirituality of Discernment

2 Balancing the Scale in the Analects and Discernment of the Spirits in the
Prophets of the Hebrew Bible

3 Time in Mencius and Kairos in the New Testament

4 Xunzi's Deliberation and Encounter of Two Horizons

5 Christian Understanding of the Book of Changes

6 Timely Action in the Book of Changes and Cassian's Discretion

7 The Confucian Timely Mean in the Doctrine of the Mean

8 Dong Zhongshu's Yinyang and Benedict's Discretion

9 Zhu Xi's Timely Mean and Thomas Aquinas' Prudence

10 Wang Yangming's Innate Knowledge and the Contemplative Prudence in the
Cloud of Unknowing

11 T'oegye Yi Hwangs Holdinging Fast the Mean and Ignatius Loyolas
Discernment of Spirits

12 Yulgok Yi I's Timely Governance and Vincent de Paul's Social Discernment

13 Tasan Chng Yagyong's Timely Mean : Fusion of Confucian and Christian
Traditions of Discernment

14 Contemporary Vision: Discernment and Dialogue

Glossary

Bibliography
Sung-Hae Kim, S.C., is a professor emerita in the Department of Religious Studies at Sogang University, Seoul, Korea. She holds an M.A. in theology from Marquette University and a Th.D. in comparative study of religions from Harvard University and is a member of the Sisters of Charity of Seton Hill.