Feasts of Memory: Collective Remembering, Liturgical Time Travel and the Actualisation of the Past

How does religious liturgy connect participants to each other and to those that went before them thereby creating a living tradition that can span millennia? By drawing together insights from theology, psychology, and the philosophy of mind, we seek to explore the nature of communal remembering in r...

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Bibliographic Details
Authors: Cockayne, Joshua 1990- (Author) ; Salter, Gideon (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Wiley-Blackwell [2021]
In: Modern theology
Year: 2021, Volume: 37, Issue: 2, Pages: 275-295
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Celebration / Collective memory / Episodic memory / Judaism / Christianity
IxTheo Classification:AE Psychology of religion
BH Judaism
CA Christianity
RC Liturgy
Online Access: Presumably Free Access
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Summary:How does religious liturgy connect participants to each other and to those that went before them thereby creating a living tradition that can span millennia? By drawing together insights from theology, psychology, and the philosophy of mind, we seek to explore the nature of communal remembering in religious rites. We begin by showing that the sense of memory used in Jewish and Christian Scriptures is much richer than mere fact recollection; to remember is to participate in the events of the past, to experience them as part of the narrative of a community’s present, and to fuel the community’s imagination about its future. Crucial to this corporate religious sense of memory is the concept of actualisation, in which some ritual or narrative allows the community to relive events of the past. We then argue that contemporary work on the psychology and philosophy of memory can help us to think about the application of these biblical senses of memory to contemporary practice.
ISSN:1468-0025
Contains:Enthalten in: Modern theology
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1111/moth.12683