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6 Aug 2025 | |
Alumni |
One can know something without being able to prove it to others. For what does one acquire by proving to others what one already knew aside from the fact that one already indeed knew what one did? And so it is with knowledge of God. Proving to others that God exists has nothing to do with knowing him. One could spend a whole lifetime attempting to prove God to others and yet never know him for oneself. Knowing God, which is a personal knowledge, a knowledge by acquaintance, means pressing deeper into the life he has ordained. This unusual book, Kierkegaardian in tone, is a continuation of previous works and an essential addition to DeLay's ongoing effort to revive Christian existentialism into a living philosophy through the "theological turn" of phenomenology.
“What you know best – because you learned it by an unquestionable experience – looks the most difficult to express. Every serious thinker has to face this paradox. One of the best, but most challenging tactics leads to denying the armor (I mean the lengthy and heavy discursive demonstration) and to preferring the arrow: to shoot it as far and precisely as its light and swift flight allows it to go and to hit the heart of the reader. So you must try writing an aphorism. The tactic fits all the more when it is all about God – not an object, but a target, a self-revealing target. To succeed writing this way, you need style, vision, and courage. Steven DeLay displays all of them. He should be read as he has written: with care.”
– Jean-Luc Marion, Fellow of the Académie Française
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