Book Description
Discusses the complexities and paradoxes of love as represented in the history of Western philosophy and Christianity. In The Asymptote of Love, James Kellenberger develops a theory of religious love that resists essentialist definitions of the term and brings into conversation historical debates on love in Western philosophy and Christian theology. He argues that if love can be likened to a mathematical asymptote, which is a straight line that infinitely approaches a curve but never quite reaches it, then the asymptote of love reaches toward the infinite endpoint of love at its uttermost, namely, Gods love. Drawing upon a broad range of thinkers who have put forth classic debates on lovesuch as St. Augustine of Hippo, Anders Nygren, and St. Thomas Aquinas, as well as some lesser known figures in the debate, such as Leo Tolstoy and Albert SchweitzerKellenberger explains the profound connection between human agape and Gods infinite love in its capacity to offer both directive guidance and to exist beyond human conception. The widening of the circle of love is a rather novel contribution, both from the author and from the twentieth century in general. For this reason alone, the book stands out in contemporary publishing. Joeri Schrijvers, author of Between Faith and Belief: Toward a Contemporary Phenomenology of Religious Life