Jerusalem Pilgrims : Spirituality, Rationality, and the Iconic in the Ministry of St. George's College

Abstract

Pilgrims to Jerusalem and the Holy Land often find questions about the authenticity of holy places unsettling. But genuine questions lead to new horizons. The Anglican St. George’s College in Jerusalem, offers holistic “study-pilgrimages” which bring prayer and devotion together with academic study. Following the hermeneutics of Hans-Georg Gadamer, the interplay between the spiritual and the rational on a pilgrimage is characterized here as a “conversation” and imagined as an element within a personal relation with the divine, as understood by Martin Buber. These ideas are explored further through a consideration of the classical theology of icons found in the writings of John of Damascus and Theodore the Studite in the eighth and ninth centuries, and rooted in the Christology of the Council of Chalcedon (451 CE). Overall, pilgrimage and holy places are seen as “iconic” and the conversation between the spiritual and the rational as having its roots in the relational interplay between the human and the divine. It is maintained that spirituality and rationality can co-exist on St. George’s College courses within a creative inter-relation which draws pilgrims into the presence of God, showing that questions of the authenticity of sites are only part of a much wider pilgrim experience.

Presenters

Stephen W. Need
Associate Professor, Theology, University of Notre Dame, London, United Kingdom

Details

Presentation Type

Paper Presentation in a Themed Session

Theme

Religious Community and Socialization

KEYWORDS

CHRISTOLOGY, CONVERSATION, HOLY PLACE, ICON, MINISTRY, PILGRIMAGE, PRAYER, RATIONALIKY, SPIRITUALITY

Digital Media

Downloads

Jerusalem Pilgrims (pptx)

Jerusalem_Pilgrims_4.8.21.pptx