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The main question in the book (as you probably already know from the title) is whether Heidegger's thought is compatible with Christianity. Of course to answer this question we first needed to know what Heidegger's thought consisted of, which takes up most of the book and makes it worth while even if you don't care if Heidegger can be 'Christianized'.
Although the book is brief (only 121 pages) it covers everything from Being and Time to Time and Being and beyond (which is a long and mystifying way -- or at lest it is without this book). Heidegger's Nazism is also dealt with very briefly, but the main concern in the book, after giving a tour of the philosophy, is the relationship to Christianity. Others before Macquarrie have seen this relationship Etienne Gilson, for example, clamed that Heidegger ' is taking us to the only real metaphysical problem. I believe he could... help us not only to deeper insights into his own thought, but even into that of... Thomas Aquinas'.
It is difficult (at lest for me and I suppose others with similar obsessions) to read Heidegger's attempted retrievals of Being -- that light by which all existing entities are viewed. And not think of biblical passages like Exodus 3:14. I supposes in the end some of Heidegger's thoughts are good for Christianity while some are not (or less obviously so). The ontological difference for the most part probably is; while all the twisting and turning of Being would probably be the end of anything like an orthodox Christianity.
This book doesn't say that Heidegger's philosophy was Christian -- in fact Heidegger said a Christian philosophy was nonsense 'a round square and a misunderstanding' -- but if you want an intro. to his thought or see some potential parallels between his thought and Christianity this is a good book.
The second chapter of this book traces the existentialist style of philosophizing through the history of philosophy - From the pre-Hellenistic age up until modern times. Macquarrie shows that the existentialist style of thought commonly emerges in a society when people find that their securities are threatened, when social structures and values begin to decay, and when the ambiguities of the world become more obvious.
This book is laid out so that every chapter discusses a separate topic common among existentialist philosophers. The book covers everything form thought and language (chapter 7), Finitude and guilt (chapter 10), authentic existence (chapter 11) and metaphysics (chapter 13). In the final two chapters Macquarrie evaluates the strengths and weakness of existeialism and outlines some of the contributions the philosophy has made in other areas - psychology, ethics, literature, education etc. if you're looking to learn about existentialism this is an excellent introduction.
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This dictionary was updated in 1986, making it 14-15 years old. While it has a reference to 'cloning' it doesn't to the 'internet' and some other recent topics. This however means that the Christian ethicist has to keep thinking up things for themeslves rather than being able to look them up - a sign of our fast-moving times.
I would recommend this work for anyone who has to deal with controversial from a Christian framework.
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Sacraments are vague and mysterious (much more the musterion than the sacramentum) in many ways, and Macquarrie takes great care to be as inclusive of differing meanings. Sacramentality can be very broad, as in Temple's view of the 'sacramental universe' he felt exists around us. However, there is a danger in this kind of sacramental view. 'There is a danger that if one uses the term "sacrament" (or any other term) in a very broad sense, it begins to lose all definition and lapses into vagueness.' (p. 12) The temptation to fall into pantheistic world-views is high; even should this be avoided, the simple logic that if everything is a sacrament, is sacrament then a meaningful term (it would certainly be no distinction), makes sacrament irrelevant. Without discounting the idea that God may permeate everything, or at least have some presence or basis in everything, Macquarrie states 'God is not equally present, or, better expressed, present with equal clarity, in everything.' (p. 9) With this statement, specific sacraments become meaningful.
But meaning requires more than a simple sacrament. Macquarrie concedes that '...there has been an unfortunate tendency in Christianity for word and sacrament to become separated.' (p. 22) The framework of community, liturgy, and faith provide the meaningful setting for the sacraments. Sacrament in this context provides a doorway to the sacred, and, while a symbol, it is (to use Tillich's language) 'a symbol [which] opens up new levels of reality,' and 'participates in the reality which it symbolises.' (pp. 30-31) Sacraments devoid of relevance to a community fails to communication meaning, and thus ceases to be a sacrament. Sacraments require an inward reality, a divine communication, and 'without this inward reality, the sacrament would not be a sacrament at all, but a mere empty ceremony.' (p. 47) Macquarrie is adamant about resisting the tendency in some of separating inward and outward aspects of sacraments.
There is no easy definition or set of defining characteristics into which all sacraments tend to fit. 'There is sufficient untidiness among these different sacraments to show us that there is no uniform concept that holds all the Christian sacraments together, but rather a "family resemblance".' (p. 47) This is part of the mystery of the sacraments, but that explanation (or perhaps even, excuse) is unsatisfying. In discussing the seven sacraments commonly held as sacraments by history,'...we find that these seven are so diverse among themselves that it is hard to say exactly what it is that entitles them all to be grouped under the sacramental umbrella.' (pp. 36-37) For instance, not all sacraments are 'communal' (penance); not all sacraments are repeated events (baptism, confirmation); not all sacraments are available to all (is a person less of a person, or somehow less able to connect to the divine if not married, or not ordained?). Macquarrie even asks of certain sacraments if they are still relevant and have a communicative ability for contemporary culture, particularly holy orders and unction. Finally Macquarrie decides that these do still have value in today's society (for different reasons for each sacrament), but the argument from history can only go so far.
Macquarrie's strongest chapters are those discussing Baptism and Eucharist, the two sacraments given 'pride-of-place' among the sacraments in the Anglican world (which shows a somewhat protestant tendency). Baptism as an initiation into community and Eucharist as a constant renewing link to the community, and both as symbolic (in the symbol which participates in the reality it symbolises) action-events are the primary means of making the presence of Christ real and available to the life of the community. 'Whatever theory of presence one may hold--transubstantiation, transvaluation, transignification, even Tillich's theory of symbolism which allows the participation of the symbol in the reality which it symbolises--so long as it remains within the eucharistic context and the eucharistic community, that bread is for us the bread that comes down from heaven for the life of the world.' (p 156) In the discussion of these sacraments, Macquarrie very carefully stresses the necessity of connection of word and sacramental action, and of inward and outward convergence, and of human intent and divine covenantal promise.