Abstract
This study is an analysis of the relationship between homo religiosus
and the Christian man, as it emerges from Mircea Eliade’s work.
His ideas concerning the dialectics sacred-profane are related to homo
religiosus, the man of the traditional societies. According to Eliade’s vision, one can
use the term homo religiosus only within the context of his universe. Many mythical
themes are present in the modern world, but it is difficult to identify them, going
through the process of desacralization. The “mythical” elements became Christian
from the very beginnings and they are still significant for Christianity which
characterizes itself by rendering value to history. The issue that Eliade analyses is
whether Christianity can develop the sacred horizon of the archaic societies.
As a conclusion of this research, one cannot say that there is a separation of
homo religious from Christian man. The reader’s impression is that the scientist refers
to Christianity as having lost the real meaning, as it was discovered in its early
beginnings. Although the modern man still keeps the Christian elements, is far from
what represented the Christian man from his early centuries. However, there are many
common points of homo religiosus with the archaic societies.
The critics treat the issue from some perspectives which are different from the
ideas of the scientist from Chicago: either as being based on the protestant theology of
“God’s Death” as the cases of Kenneth Hamilton and J. J. Altizer, either from partial
position, the accusations not having a real basis. Dubuisson’s case is this way.
This work was meant to be a step of an approach that attempts to discover
correspondence between the scientist’s ideas and Christianity.