Review of Nome's The Quintessence of True Being
Review of Nome's The Quintessence of True Being
Review of Nome's The Quintessence of True Being
54
is more Pauline than Augustinian. The Pauline nature of Ricoeurs theology and theodicy is evident
from the last part of his book. He speaks of the
pastoral aspect of suffering and the consequences
of evil: The failure of the theory of retribution
at a speculative level must be integrated into the
work of mourning as a deliverance from the accusation which in some way exposes suffering as undeserved. [Ricoeur goes on to refer to rabbi Harold S
Kushners When Bad Things Happen to Good People,
(New York: Schocken, 1981)] A second stage of
the spiritualization of lament is to allow oneself
outbursts of complaint directed at God (69).
Ricoeurs thrust is toward the lived experience
of being amidst evil and surviving evil; thus his
theodicy is very much Pauline.
Neither Ward, nor Gisel mention the influence that Jrgen Moltmann had on Ricoeur. When
Moltmann experienced Nazi genocide; he wrote
how God suffered with the victims of Hitlers annihilating rage. Ricoeurs accusation against God
is the impatience of hope (70), which as Ricoeur
points out has its origins in the Psalms of the Bible
(ibid.). True theologian that he was, Ricoeurs ending shows his understanding of human nature, of
God, of Buddhism and of evil: since once violence
has been suppressed, the enigma of true suffering,
of irreducible suffering, will be laid bare (72).
Subhasis Chattopadhyay
Psychoanalyst
Assistant Professor of English
Ramananda College, Bishnupur
The Quintessence of
True Being
Nome
530