The Marrano God: Abstraction, Messianicity, and Retreat in Derrida’s “Faith and Knowledge”

This article conducts a close reading of Derrida’s 1994 essay, “Faith and Knowledge”, devoted to the analysis of what Hegel called ‘the religion of modern times’. The reference to Hegel’s “Glauben und Wissen” is crucial...

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Main Author: Agata Bielik-Robson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-12-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/10/1/22
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spelling doaj-2c46a7a6deb046828143695691699f762020-11-24T20:46:28ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442018-12-011012210.3390/rel10010022rel10010022The Marrano God: Abstraction, Messianicity, and Retreat in Derrida’s “Faith and Knowledge”Agata Bielik-Robson0Department of Theology and Religious Studies, the University of Nottingham, University Park, Nottingham NG7 2RD, UKThis article conducts a close reading of Derrida’s 1994 essay, “Faith and Knowledge”, devoted to the analysis of what Hegel called ‘the religion of modern times’. The reference to Hegel’s “Glauben und Wissen” is crucial here, since my reading is meant to offer a supplement to Michael Naas’ commentary on “Faith and Knowledge”, Miracle and Machine, in which Naas states that he is not going to pursue the connection between Derrida and Hegel. It was, however, Hegel who defined the ‘modern religious sentiment’ in terms of the ‘religion of the death of God’, and this definition constitutes Derrida’s point of departure. Derrida agrees with Hegel’s diagnosis, but is also critical of its Protestant–Lutheran interpretation, which founds modern religiosity on the ‘memory of the Passion’, and attempts a different reading of the ‘death of God’ motif as the ‘divine retreat’, pointing to a non-normative ‘Marrano’ kind of faith that stakes on the alternative ‘memory of the Passover’. The apparent visibility of the ‘returning religion’ Derrida witnesses at the beginning of the 90s hides for him a new dimension of the ‘original faith’, which Derrida associates with the universal messianic justice and which he ascribes to the paradoxical position of the Marranos: the secret followers of the God ‘in retreat’.http://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/10/1/22DerridaHegelMarranosFaith and Knowledgemessianismuniversalism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Agata Bielik-Robson
spellingShingle Agata Bielik-Robson
The Marrano God: Abstraction, Messianicity, and Retreat in Derrida’s “Faith and Knowledge”
Religions
Derrida
Hegel
Marranos
Faith and Knowledge
messianism
universalism
author_facet Agata Bielik-Robson
author_sort Agata Bielik-Robson
title The Marrano God: Abstraction, Messianicity, and Retreat in Derrida’s “Faith and Knowledge”
title_short The Marrano God: Abstraction, Messianicity, and Retreat in Derrida’s “Faith and Knowledge”
title_full The Marrano God: Abstraction, Messianicity, and Retreat in Derrida’s “Faith and Knowledge”
title_fullStr The Marrano God: Abstraction, Messianicity, and Retreat in Derrida’s “Faith and Knowledge”
title_full_unstemmed The Marrano God: Abstraction, Messianicity, and Retreat in Derrida’s “Faith and Knowledge”
title_sort marrano god: abstraction, messianicity, and retreat in derrida’s “faith and knowledge”
publisher MDPI AG
series Religions
issn 2077-1444
publishDate 2018-12-01
description This article conducts a close reading of Derrida’s 1994 essay, “Faith and Knowledge”, devoted to the analysis of what Hegel called ‘the religion of modern times’. The reference to Hegel’s “Glauben und Wissen” is crucial here, since my reading is meant to offer a supplement to Michael Naas’ commentary on “Faith and Knowledge”, Miracle and Machine, in which Naas states that he is not going to pursue the connection between Derrida and Hegel. It was, however, Hegel who defined the ‘modern religious sentiment’ in terms of the ‘religion of the death of God’, and this definition constitutes Derrida’s point of departure. Derrida agrees with Hegel’s diagnosis, but is also critical of its Protestant–Lutheran interpretation, which founds modern religiosity on the ‘memory of the Passion’, and attempts a different reading of the ‘death of God’ motif as the ‘divine retreat’, pointing to a non-normative ‘Marrano’ kind of faith that stakes on the alternative ‘memory of the Passover’. The apparent visibility of the ‘returning religion’ Derrida witnesses at the beginning of the 90s hides for him a new dimension of the ‘original faith’, which Derrida associates with the universal messianic justice and which he ascribes to the paradoxical position of the Marranos: the secret followers of the God ‘in retreat’.
topic Derrida
Hegel
Marranos
Faith and Knowledge
messianism
universalism
url http://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/10/1/22
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