Political Theology and Pauline Law: Notes Toward a Sapiential Legality

Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2009 (146):140-157 (2009)
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Abstract

In 1979, on the thirty-ninth anniversary of the closing of the Franco-Spanish border at Port Bou and one day before the anniversary of the suicide of Walter Benjamin, Jacob Taubes and Carl Schmitt opened the Bible in the Sauerland. The two men sat down in Plettenburg to read St. Paul's Epistle to the Romans, chapters 9-11. As if in memory of Benjamin, they spoke “under a priestly seal”: Schmitt, the most important state law theorist of the twentieth century, a Roman Catholic and sometime member of the Nazi Party; Taubes, a Jewish philosopher of a Messianic and oddly left-wing disposition.…

Other Versions

reprint Riches, A. (2009) "Political Theology and Pauline Law: Notes Toward a Sapiential Legality". Télos 2009(146):140-157

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