Apophasis, Abnegation, and Liturgy

Apophatic theology is normally housed in the epistemological wing of the academy, and is treated as a via negativa that negates the assertion just made. This apophaticism feels like a wave that washes away every cataphatic sand castle we build. In this essay, I would like to change the street ad...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: David W. Fagerberg
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Catholic Academy in Warsaw 2022-12-01
Series:Warszawskie Studia Teologiczne
Subjects:
Online Access:https://czasopismowst.pl/index.php/wst/article/view/372
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Apophatic theology is normally housed in the epistemological wing of the academy, and is treated as a via negativa that negates the assertion just made. This apophaticism feels like a wave that washes away every cataphatic sand castle we build. In this essay, I would like to change the street address of apophaticism to the house of liturgy. There, apophatic theology is a liturgical reaction to the sovereignty of God. It is a posture of latria. However, such a liturgical posture depends, in turn, upon abnegation. The infinity of God (apophasis) reveals our nothingness (abnegation), and our nothingness makes us rejoice (liturgy) in God’s infinity. Worse than idolatry is worship of ourselves: auto-latria. Apophatic theology is a liturgical reaction to the sovereignty of God, which, in turn, causes a state of abnegation, which I therefore call liturgical abnegation because it means forsaking autolatry.
ISSN:0209-3782
2719-7530