Investigating a range of eschatological and apocalyptic ideologies, this volume explores the connection between notions of sacred space and time in Jewish, Christian, and Muslim understandings of Jerusalem.
The recognition of Jerusalem as a holy city both unites and divides Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. While these three religious traditions share a reverence for the same ancient city, this veneration leads more often to tension and violence than to commonality and cooperation.
Each of these religions draws heavily from religious memory and eschatological prophecies, and sees Jerusalem as a site of past and future upheaval; however, the distinctions in their visions imbue Jerusalem with meanings that reinforce conflicting and contested ideologies. Offering multiple analyses of religious interpretations of the city and its sacred sites, including the Temple Mount, this volume explores these divergent visions of the remembered and anticipated Jerusalem.
Introduction
“Introduction: Jerusalem in Memory and Eschatology,” Emma O’Donnell Polyakov (Merrimack College, USA)
Visions of Time: Memory and Eschatology
1. “‘Part of Prophecy’: Christian Zionism, Dispensationalism, and Time,” Aron Engberg (Lund University, Sweden)
2. “A House of Prayer for all Peoples: A Universal Eschatological Vision for Jerusalem,” Alon Goshen-Gottstein (Elijah Interfaith Institute, Jerusalem)
3. “Islamic Visions of Jesus: Revelation, Prophecy, and Eschatology,” Antonio Cuciniello (Catholic University of Milan, Italy)
4. “Jerusalem in Memory and Eschatology: A Catholic Perspective,” Dirk Ansorge (Jesuit Faculty of Philosophy and Theology Sankt Georgen, Germany)
5. “The Hypertemple in Mind: God’s Voice Rebooted in the Temple Scroll,” Natalie Bloch (Uppsala University, Sweden)
Visions of Place: Contemporary Conflicts
6. “An Unprecedented Alliance: Evangelical Christians, Jews, and the Rebuilding of the Temple,” Yaakov Ariel (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA)
7. “How the Taboo on Jews Entering the Temple Mount was Broken by Religious Zionist Activists,” Motti Inbari (University of North Carolina at Pembroke, USA)
8. “Jerusalem from the Perspective of the ISIS Apocalyptic Propaganda,” Bronislav Ostranský (Czech Academy of Sciences, Czechia)
Conclusion
“A Place in Time and a Time in Place: The Spatial and Temporal Nexus in Jewish, Christian, and Muslim Visions of Jerusalem,” Emma O’Donnell Polyakov (Merrimack College, USA)
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