Bulgakov's sophiology

towards an orthodox economic theological engagement with the modern world

Josephien H. van Kessel

pp. 251-267

Contemporary scholarship interprets Sergej Bulgakov's sophiology as an engagement of Orthodox theology with the modern world and as being on its way to becoming a political theology. In this paper I undertake a re-evaluation of the kind of engagement sophiology was and was intended to be, and of the kind of world it was destined for. It will be argued that sophiology was not so much a political-theological engagement with the world concentrating on the relation of religion and politics or state and church, but rather an economic-theological engagement in the tradition of oikonomia theology that tried to understand the world in its relation to and as part of divine oikonomia. Furthermore, the world sophiology promotes engagement with is not only the real contemporary world, or the sociological ideal type of modernity, but primarily the world as such, this secular and human world over and against the divine and transcendent world.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s11212-012-9171-5

Full citation:

van Kessel, J. H. (2012). Bulgakov's sophiology: towards an orthodox economic theological engagement with the modern world. Studies in East European Thought 64 (3-4), pp. 251-267.

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