The new pope, Leo XIV, was one of your students. Could you tell us how his Augustinian identity connects with your theology of the event? John D. Caputo: Yes, he was one of my students in a course I taught for Augustinian seminarians at Villanova University. The seminarians, who were part of the Order of Saint Augustine (OSA), had to complete a rigorous philosophy curriculum, and one of the required courses was mine: German Existentialism and Phenomenology. In that course, I taught Kierkegaard and Nietzsche in the first half, then Husserl and excerpts from Heidegger’s Being and Time in the second half. He was part of a sharp group, including Robert Dodaro, who became a leading Augustine scholar. Dodaro and a few others were more vocal, while the future pope was more reserved—he listened more than he spoke. That trait became significant later when the cardinals explained their choice: he’s a good listener. People feel heard in his presence, which enhances his communicat...
Google AI: Postmodern philosopher and radical theologian John D. ("Jack") Caputo argues that a traditional, omnipotent Supreme Being does not exist. Instead, he asserts that God "insists" as an imaginative event, a weak force, and a call to unconditional love whose actual existence relies entirely on human agency and action.Caputo's post-theistic philosophy reframes how we think about the divine:God as Event: Caputo argues that God is not a being with physical reality or controlling power, but a dynamic, unfolding event of love and justice. He posits that "without the world, there would be no God".The Weakness of God: Rejecting the classical concept of an all-powerful, sovereign God, Caputo wrote his seminal book, The Weakness of God, exploring a God who operates not through domination, but through vulnerable love and the “foolishness” of the cross.God Insists, We Exist: In The Insistence of God: A Theology of Perhaps, he further details how God does not "exist" in the traditional metaphysical sense, but "insists" as a calling and an intervention that depends on us to realize it.Caputo does not adhere to classical atheism; rather, he embraces a form of "radical theology" designed to reconstruct religious faith in an age where traditional, metaphysical deities are largely unbelievable. His work has sparked broad discussion on how to reinterpret religion; on the Reddit RadicalChristianity Community, some users suggest that Caputo's "theopoetics" helps disrupt dogmatic religious views by giving believers creative freedom, while others find the absence of an agential God challenging to traditional faith.
Postmodern philosopher and radical theologian John D. ("Jack") Caputo argues that a traditional, omnipotent Supreme Being does not exist. Instead, he asserts that God "insists" as an imaginative event, a weak force, and a call to unconditional love whose actual existence relies entirely on human agency and action. [ 1 , 2 ] Caputo's post-theistic philosophy reframes how we think about the divine: God as Event: Caputo argues that God is not a being with physical reality or controlling power, but a dynamic, unfolding event of love and justice. He posits that "without the world, there would be no God". [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 ] The Weakness of God: Rejecting the classical concept of an all-powerful, sovereign God, Caputo wrote his seminal book, The Weakness of God , exploring a God who operates not through domination, but through vulnerable love and the “foolishness” of the cross. [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 ] God Insists, We Exist: In The Insistence of God: A T...