Table Of ContentThe Challenge of God
ii
The Challenge of God
 Continental Philosophy and the Catholic  
Intellectual Tradition
Edited by
Colby Dickinson, Hugh Miller, and Kathleen McNutt
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Contents
Notes on Contributors  vi
Preface Colby Dickinson, Hugh Miller, and Kathleen McNutt  ix
Introduction: God as Challenge: The Past and Future of Continental 
Philosophy of Religion Bruce Ellis Benson  1
1  Is God a Challenge for Philosophy? Adriaan T. Peperzak  23
2  On the Infinite: A Response to Adriaan Peperzak David Tracy  31
3  God and the Ambivalence of Being Jean-Luc Marion, Translated by 
Kathleen McNutt  37
4  Being, God, Nihilism, Love: On Marion’s “Ambiguity of Being”  
Hugh Miller  55
5  A Phenomenology of Revelation: Contemporary Encounters with Saint 
Ignatius Loyola Robyn Horner  69
6  “Consolation without Previous Cause”? Consolation, Controversy, and 
Devotional Agency J. Michelle Molina  87
7  Tradition and Event: Radicalizing the Catholic Principle John D. Caputo  99
8  Theological Thinking and John Caputo’s Tradition and Event: 
Radicalizing the Catholic Principle John McCarthy  113
9  Epic and the Crucified God Thomas J. J. Altizer  127
10  Scripture, Epic, and Radical Catholicism: A Response to Thomas J. J. 
Altizer Adam Kotsko  135
11  Anatheism: A Theopoetic Challenge Richard Kearney  143
12  The God Machine: Techno-Theology and  
Theo-Poetics John Panteleimon Manoussakis  161
Index  170
Contributors
Thomas J.J. Altizer was Professor Emeritus of Religious Studies at State University of 
New York at Stony Brook. During his long and distinguished career, Altizer published 
numerous books working out the implications of a theology of the “Death of God,” 
recently including Living the Death of God, The Apocalyptic Trinity, and The Call to 
Radical Theology.
Bruce Ellis Benson is Senior Research Fellow at the University of St. Andrews. He 
is Executive Director of the Society for Continental Philosophy and Theology. He 
taught for over twenty years at Wheaton College. His research interests include the 
“theological turn” in phenomenology and work at the intersection of Continental 
philosophy and theology as well as hermeneutics and interpretation theory.
John D. Caputo is the Thomas J. Watson Professor of Religion and Humanities Emeritus 
at Syracuse University and the David R. Cook Professor of Philosophy Emeritus at 
Villanova University. Caputo specializes in Continental philosophy of religion, working 
on approaches to religion and theology in the light of contemporary phenomenology, 
hermeneutics and deconstruction, and also the presence in Continental philosophy 
of radical religious and theological motifs. He is known especially for his notions of 
radical hermeneutics and the weakness of God.
Colby Dickinson is Associate Professor of Theology at Loyola University Chicago. 
He has published and researches on the relationship of contemporary Continental 
thought and systematic theology, focusing on the works of Theodor Adorno, Jacques 
Derrida, Michel Foucault, Giorgio Agamben, and Paul Ricoeur. He is the author of 
Agamben and Theology, Between the Canon and the Messiah, Words Fail, and Theology 
and Contemporary Continental Philosophy.
Robyn Horner is Associate Professor in the Office of the Dean of Theology and 
Philosophy at Australian Catholic University. Her work is focused on the contributions 
of phenomenology and post-structuralism, especially the work of Levinas, Derrida, 
and Marion, to the field of Christian theology and philosophy of religion, particularly 
on the topic of r/Revelation.
Richard Kearney holds the Charles B. Seelig Chair in Philosophy at Boston College 
and has served as Visiting Professor at University College Dublin, the University 
of Paris-Sorbonne, and the Australian Catholic University. He is the author of over 
twenty books on European philosophy and literature (including two novels and a
Contributors vii
volume of poetry) and has edited or coedited fifteen others, many on the intersection 
of hermeneutics and the problem of God.
Adam Kotsko is on the faculty of the Shimer Great Books School at North Central 
College, where he teaches widely in the humanities and social sciences. His research 
focuses on political theology, continental philosophy, and the history of Christian 
thought. He is the author, most recently, of The Prince of This World and Neoliberalism’s 
Demons.
John Panteleimon Manoussakis is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the College of 
the Holy Cross. His research interests include philosophy of religion, phenomenology 
(in particular Heidegger and Marion), ancient Greek philosophy (especially Plato and 
the Neo-Platonic Tradition), Patristics, and psychoanalysis.
Jean-Luc Marion is the Andrew Thomas Greeley and Grace McNichols Greeley 
Professor of Catholic Studies and Professor of the Philosophy of Religions and 
Theology at the University of Chicago; Dominique Dubarle Chair of Philosophy at 
l’Institut Catholique de Paris; Professor Emeritus at the University of Paris-Sorbonne; 
and a member of the Académie française. His work is well known in the history of 
philosophy and in philosophy of religion, in which he has initiated and written 
extensively on the phenomenology of givenness.
John McCarthy is Associate Professor of Theology at Loyola University Chicago. 
His teaching and research focus on fundamental theology and hermeneutics, with 
research interests in the intersection of philosophy and theology, especially modern 
and contemporary, and literary theory.
Kathleen McNutt is a Ph.D. candidate in Theology at Loyola University Chicago. 
Her research currently focuses on the relationship between theosis and ecofeminist 
theology. She has translated two essays by Jean-Luc Marion, including the one in the 
present volume.
Hugh Miller is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Loyola University Chicago. His 
areas of specialization are philosophy of religion, philosophical theology, history 
of metaphysics, and contemporary French philosophy. Dr. Miller is the author of 
several articles and conference papers, and is presently at work on two book-length 
manuscripts: the first on the philosophy of Emanuel Levinas and the second on Hegel’s 
system.
J. Michelle Molina is the John and Rosemary Croghan Chair and Associate Professor 
in Catholic Studies at Northwestern University. She studies the Society of Jesus in the 
early modern period. Molina is the author of To Overcome Oneself: The Jesuit Ethic and 
the Spirit of Global Expansion, which examines the impact that the Jesuit program of 
radical self-reflexivity had on the formation of early modern selves in Europe and New 
Spain.
viii Contributors
Adriaan T. Peperzak is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at Loyola University 
Chicago, where he held the Arthur J. Schmitt Chair from 1991 to 2015. His research 
in the history of philosophy has focused on Hegel (six books and numerous articles) 
and Levinas (two books and three others edited). He also published on Plato, Aristotle, 
Bonaventura, Descartes, Heidegger, and Ricoeur, and on thematic questions in ethics, 
social and political philosophy, metaphilosophy, and philosophy of religion.
David  Tracy  is  the  Andrew  Thomas  Greeley  and  Grace  McNichols  Greeley 
Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Catholic Studies and Professor of Theology 
and the Philosophy of Religions at the University of Chicago. His many publications 
include The Analogical Imagination: Christian Theology and the Culture of Pluralism 
and On Naming the Present: Reflections on God, Hermeneutics, and Church.
Preface
Colby Dickinson, Hugh Miller, and Kathleen McNutt
Some of the many recent volumes on the intersection of Continental philosophy 
and theology have included an essay or two on the relationship of Catholicism to 
Continental philosophy, but none have centered themselves on these two traditions 
that have been mingled together for millennia. No volume of essays has yet sought 
to address directly this major lacuna in scholarship and bring both Continental 
philosophy of religion and the Catholic intellectual heritage into dialogue. From this 
point of view, the uniqueness of this volume lies in its direct engagement with many 
perspectives within the Catholic intellectual tradition from a variety of philosophical, 
theological, spiritual, literary, and artistic dimensions. As the Introduction by Bruce 
Ellis Benson will demonstrate, continental thought has a core strongly influenced by 
Catholic thought and that connection needs to be teased out in a much more in-depth 
way.
It is indeed somewhat surprising that Catholic intellectual traditions have not 
been singled out specifically for their influence on Continental philosophical lines 
of thought. So many of the French, German, and Italian philosophers commonly 
referenced in Continental circles were either raised in or conversant with Catholic 
scholarship and traditions, and yet surprisingly little has been written to bring this 
context to the forefront of contemporary scholarship. Quite simply, the Catholic 
Church permeates Continental thought, especially in the modern period, from René 
Descartes and Blaise Pascal to the likes of a Jacques Maritain, an Étienne Gilson, or 
a John Henry Newman. Figures as diverse as Edith Stein and Gabriel Marcel played 
important roles in establishing phenomenological and existentialist movements, and 
many more were formed within a Catholic context, though not formally being a part 
of Catholicism or having any desire to join the Catholic Church.
In addition to this obviously Catholic backdrop, the past few decades have seen a 
number of significant continental thinkers engage with religious themes in ways both 
productive and insightful. Nevertheless, the recognition of just how Catholicism has 
shaped continental thought continues to elude scholars. And with fewer philosophers 
overtly identifying as Catholic these days, it is often difficult to get a sense of the 
influence  that  Catholicism  continues  to  wield  upon  philosophical  writings  and 
debates. Despite this trend, however, thinkers as diverse as Charles Taylor, Alasdair 
MacIntyre, Jean-Luc Marion, Adriaan Peperzak, John Caputo, Gianni Vattimo, Mario 
Perniola, Richard Kearney, and Michel Henry circulate around the Catholic Church 
as it informs their respective works in significant ways. In particular, debates within 
those parts of contemporary continental philosophy which have been concerned 
with what Dominique Janicaud termed the “tournant théologique”—primarily the