Habakkuk and the problem of suffering: theodicy deferred

A theological reading of the book of Habakkuk offers insight into the problem of suffering. Approaching the text canonically, this study aims to explore Habakkuk’s theological response to suffering, and the potential to relate this to Christian and classically theistic attempts to articulate a theod...

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Main Author: Whitehead, Philip
Format: Article
Published: Eisenbrauns 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/37213/
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author Whitehead, Philip
author_facet Whitehead, Philip
author_sort Whitehead, Philip
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
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description A theological reading of the book of Habakkuk offers insight into the problem of suffering. Approaching the text canonically, this study aims to explore Habakkuk’s theological response to suffering, and the potential to relate this to Christian and classically theistic attempts to articulate a theodicy. Although Habakkuk puts forward no theological objection to the idea that the suffering experienced by God’s people is, in some sense, deserved, he nonetheless questions the extent of the suffering and the justice of the God who permits it from a perspective of faith and eschatological hope. The answers to the questions posed by evil and suffering are apparently deferred by Habakkuk, who persists in faith despite the present lack of resolution to these questions. Such a reading lends support to models of theodicy that prioritize the practical dimensions of suffering, and challenges accounts that would insist on satisfactory explanations for suffering as a condition for faith.
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spelling nottingham-372132020-05-04T20:00:23Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/37213/ Habakkuk and the problem of suffering: theodicy deferred Whitehead, Philip A theological reading of the book of Habakkuk offers insight into the problem of suffering. Approaching the text canonically, this study aims to explore Habakkuk’s theological response to suffering, and the potential to relate this to Christian and classically theistic attempts to articulate a theodicy. Although Habakkuk puts forward no theological objection to the idea that the suffering experienced by God’s people is, in some sense, deserved, he nonetheless questions the extent of the suffering and the justice of the God who permits it from a perspective of faith and eschatological hope. The answers to the questions posed by evil and suffering are apparently deferred by Habakkuk, who persists in faith despite the present lack of resolution to these questions. Such a reading lends support to models of theodicy that prioritize the practical dimensions of suffering, and challenges accounts that would insist on satisfactory explanations for suffering as a condition for faith. Eisenbrauns 2016-11 Article PeerReviewed Whitehead, Philip (2016) Habakkuk and the problem of suffering: theodicy deferred. Journal of Theological Interpretation, 10.2 . ISSN 1936-0843 (In Press) Habakkuk suffering evil theodicy
spellingShingle Habakkuk
suffering
evil
theodicy
Whitehead, Philip
Habakkuk and the problem of suffering: theodicy deferred
title Habakkuk and the problem of suffering: theodicy deferred
title_full Habakkuk and the problem of suffering: theodicy deferred
title_fullStr Habakkuk and the problem of suffering: theodicy deferred
title_full_unstemmed Habakkuk and the problem of suffering: theodicy deferred
title_short Habakkuk and the problem of suffering: theodicy deferred
title_sort habakkuk and the problem of suffering: theodicy deferred
topic Habakkuk
suffering
evil
theodicy
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/37213/