The Human Being and the Created World (Gen 1 – 2). Biblical-TheologicalCchallenges to Contemporary Christian Anthropology and Ecology

Autor: Pardon, Đurica
Jazyk: chorvatština
Rok vydání: 2020
Předmět:
Zdroj: Bogoslovska smotra
Volume 90
Issue 2
ISSN: 1848-9648
0352-3101
Popis: Suvremena antropologija naglašava da su tri sfere u kojima čovjek gradi svijet odnosa: u životu s prirodom, u životu s drugim bićima i u životu s duhovnim bićima. Teološka antropologija, koristeći se saznanjima multidisciplinarnih istraživanja opće antropologije, čita biblijske tekstove te iz njih usvaja kršćanstvu vlastiti sustav ideja i praksi za vjernički život. Religiozna židovska i kršćanska teološka antropologija uvijek je smatrala da je ljudska sličnosti s Bogom temeljno polazište biblijskog poimanja čovjeka i njegov neizostavan dio. U ovom se članku izvješća o stvaranju i antropološke ideje u njima promatraju unutar konteksta cijele biblijske pripovijesti o odnosima između Boga i čovjeka te unutar kulturalnoga ideološkog konteksta njihova nastanka. Temeljna postavka koja se u ovom članku razlaže i objašnjava jest da je biblijsko-teološki antropološki nauk ovisan o teritorijalnoj i kulturalnoj smještenosti Izraela, tj. da je teritorijalna i kulturološka razlika mjesta i okružja nastanka dvaju izvješća o stvaranju presudna za razumijevanje ideološke podloge biblijske antropologije. Biblijska teološka antropologija shvaća čovjeka kao lokalizirano i uzemljeno biće koje na vlastitoj zemlji, na određenom prostoru i mjestu, živi slobodno i u miru, u političkoj samostalnosti i ekonomskoj neovisnosti časti svojeg Boga u zajedništvu s pripadnicima vlastita naroda. Iako su nastali u različitim povijesnim i kulturološkim okvirima, i jedan i drugi biblijski tekst o stvaranju čovjeka pružaju jasnu poruku da je čovjek biće životno vezano uz zemlju na svojoj osobnoj, nacionalnoj i globalnoj razini postojanja. To je ujedno i ideološka podloga biblijskoga antropološkog nauka i sastavni dio ljudskog identiteta. Takav pristup otkriva da biblijska teološka antropologija, za razliku od dosadašnjeg promatranja vjerničkog života samo u odnosima Bog – čovjek i čovjek – čovjek, sadrži dodatan element odnosa čovjek – zemlja kao neizostavan dio religioznog antropološko- teološkog sustava i daje novu i na biblijskim izvorima čvrsto utemeljenu antro-pološko-teološku sliku, koja u kontekstu suvremenog svijeta u ekološkoj krizi može pružiti jasnije odgovore na pitanje o čovjeku. Na taj se način otvara mogućnost prema novom obliku vjerodostojnoga kršćanskog teološko-antropološkog i ekološkog nauka, koji ljudskom rodu u trenutnom stanju odvojenosti, iskorijenjenosti i izemljenosti pruža priliku vlastitog spasenja i spasenja zajedničkog doma svih stvorenja – Zemlje.
Contemporary anthropology emphasises that there are three spheres in which the human being builds the world of relations: in living with nature, in living with other beings, and in living with spiritual beings. While using insights of multidisciplinary research of general anthropology, theological anthropology reads Biblical texts and adopts from them a system of ideas and practices for religious life that characterise Christianity. Religious Jewish and Christian theological anthropology always held that the human similarity with God is the fundamental starting point of the Biblical understanding of the human being and its unavoidable part. This article analyses creation accounts and their anthropological ideas within the context of the whole Biblical narrative on relations between God and the human being and within the cultural ideological context in which they emerged. The fundamental claim that the article makes and elaborates on is that the Biblical-theological anthropological teaching is dependent on the territorial and cultural situatedness of Israel, i.e., that territorial and cultural difference of place and environment in which the two creation accounts emerged plays a decisive role for understanding the ideological background of Biblical anthropology.Biblical theological anthropology understands the human being as a localised and grounded being, who lives, at a specific place, freely and in peace, and worships God in political and economic independence together with his/her own people. Although they emerged in different historical and cultural contexts, both creation accounts offer a clear message that the human being is existentially tied to earth on personal, national, and global level of existence. This is, at the same time, the ideological background of the Biblical anthropological teaching and a constituent part of human identity. Such an approach reveals that Biblical theological anthropology, as opposed to the previous understanding of religious life through the lenses of the relation between God – human being and human being – human being, contains an additional element of the relation human being – earth as an unavoidable part of religious anthropological-theological system. This offers a new and Biblically grounded anthropological-theological image that can provide clearer answers to the question of the human being in the context ofthe contemporary world and its ecological crisis. In this manner, a possibility of a new form of authentic Christian theological-anthropological and ecological teaching presents itself and offers an opportunity of salvation and saving of the common home of all creation – Earth – in the current state of alienation and uprootedness from it.
Databáze: OpenAIRE