Jung on Christianity

Jung on Christianity

Author: C. G. Jung

Publisher: Princeton University Press

Published: 1999-10-12

Total Pages: 291

ISBN-13: 0691006970

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

C. G. Jung, son of a Swiss Reformed pastor, used his Christian background throughout his career to illuminate the psychological roots of all religions. Jung believed religion was a profound, psychological response to the unknown--both the inner self and the outer worlds--and he understood Christianity to be a profound meditation on the meaning of the life of Jesus of Nazareth within the context of Hebrew spirituality and the Biblical worldview. Murray Stein's introduction relates Jung's personal relationship with Christianity to his psychological views on religion in general, his hermeneutic of religious thought, and his therapeutic attitude toward Christianity. This volume includes extensive selections from Psychological Approach to the Dogma of the Trinity," "Christ as a Symbol of the Self," from Aion, "Answer to Job," letters to Father Vincent White from Letters, and many more.


The Jungian Bible

The Jungian Bible

Author: Roberto Lima Netto

Publisher: CreateSpace

Published: 2012-05-01

Total Pages: 194

ISBN-13: 9781475249934

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This book brings life lessons taken from the Bible and the world myths and interpreted with a Jungian reading. It also offers an easy explanation for Jung's basic ideas and concepts.


The Bible as Dream

The Bible as Dream

Author: Murray Stein

Publisher:

Published: 2018-08-24

Total Pages: 210

ISBN-13: 9781630516697

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

In The Bible as Dream, Murray Stein shares important themes and images in the biblical narrative that from a psychological perspective, stand out as essential features of the meaning of the Bible for the modern reader. The Bible presents a world elaborated with reference to a specific God image. As the mythographer Karl Kerenyi puts it in writing about the Greek gods and goddesses, every god and every goddess constitutes a world. So it is too with the biblical God, whose name Stein exceptionally capitalizes throughout out of cultural respect. The biblical world is the visionary product of a particular people, the ancient Hebrews and the early Christians, who delved deeply into their God image and pulled from it the multitude of perspectives, rules for life, spiritual practices, and practical implications that all together created the tapestry that we find depicted in the canonical Bible. Yahweh is the heart and soul of this world, its creator, sustainer, and destroyer. The Bible is a dream that tells the story of how this world was brought into being in space and time and what it means. Don't miss these these timeless lectures--a work of respectful and loving interpretation.


Jung and the Bible

Jung and the Bible

Author: Wayne G. Rollins

Publisher:

Published: 1983

Total Pages: 180

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Out of the life and thought of a noted psychologist, Carl Jung, comes a captivating method for reading and understanding the Bible. Jung's study of psychology and his extensive knowledge of the human psyche give Biblical readers a new perspective for getting at the Word of God. People who read the Bible are real people who want to believe, to understand, to learn. Jung, not a Biblical scholar but a lay person and physician, helps us to believe...to understand...to learn. He views the Bible not as an ancient artifact but as an agent in the present whose myth, story, law, song, gospel, epistle, and apocalypse has the capacity to speak with power to contemporary hearts and souls.


Archetype of the Apocalypse

Archetype of the Apocalypse

Author: Edward F. Edinger

Publisher: Open Court Publishing

Published: 2002

Total Pages: 252

ISBN-13: 9780812695168

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The collective belief in Armageddon has become more powerful and widespread in the wake of recent terrorist attacks. Edward Edinger looks at the chaos predicted by the Book of Revelation and relates it to current trends including global violence, AIDS, and apocalyptic cults.


Soul and Psyche

Soul and Psyche

Author: Wayne G. Rollins

Publisher: Fortress Press

Published: 1999

Total Pages: 292

ISBN-13: 9780800627164

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The first introduction to the history and method of biblical-psychological interpretation.


Jung and the Bible

Jung and the Bible

Author: Wayne Rollins

Publisher: Wipf and Stock Publishers

Published: 2013-09-01

Total Pages: 170

ISBN-13: 1725233428

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Out of the life and thought of a noted psychologist, Carl Jung, comes a captivating approach to reading and interpreting the Bible. The book opens with the question, "Why is it that the images, characters, and stories of Scripture have the power to catalyze the imagination of the human psyche, not only among religious people, but also among artists, moviemakers, playwrights, and songwriters, some of whom are disenchanted with church, clergy, and established religion?" The answer to the question begins with Jung's statement that the Bible is an "utterance of the soul." Jung sees the Bible as a treasury of the soul (psyche), that is, the testimony of our spiritual ancestors proclaiming in history and law, prophecy and psalm, gospel and epistle, genealogy and apocalypse, their experience of the holy, and drawing us and others through us into that experience. The Bible is no stranger to Carl Jung. No document is cited by Jung more often, and no cast of characters from any tradition is summoned to the stage of Jung's discourse with greater regularity than are the Adams and Abrahams, the Melchizedeks and Moseses, the Peters and Pauls of Judaeo-Christian Scripture--185 biblical figures in all. Beyond that, the realities and experiences that concern Jung most are also those that occupy prime attention in the writings of biblical authors: a sense of soul, of personal destiny and call; an openness to the wisdom of dreams, revelations, and visions; the power of symbols and archetypal images; the riddle of evil within God's world; and above all, the sense of God--the numinous, the Holy, at the center of things.


Jung and the Lost Gospels

Jung and the Lost Gospels

Author: Stephan A. Hoeller

Publisher: Quest Books

Published: 1989-10-01

Total Pages: 294

ISBN-13: 9780835606462

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The "Lost Gospels" refer to the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Nag Hammadi Library, both discovered in the 1940s. The Nag Hammadi Library consists of writings found by two peasants who unearthed clay jars in 1945 in upper Egypt. These did not appear in English for 32 years, because the right to publish was contended by scholars, politicians, and antique dealers. The Dead Sea Scrolls, discovered in clay jars in Palestine by a goatherder in 1947, weathered similar storms. The first team of analysts were mostly Christian clergy, who weren't anxious to share material that frightened church leaders. As Dr. Hoeller shows, they rightly feared the documents would reveal information that might detract from unique claims of Christianity. Indeed, the Dead Sea Scrolls and Nag Hammadi Library both contradict and complement accepted tenets of the Old and New Testaments.


Answer to Job

Answer to Job

Author: C. G. Jung

Publisher: Princeton University Press

Published: 2012-01-12

Total Pages: 143

ISBN-13: 1400839130

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Considered one of Jung's most controversial works, Answer to Job also stands as Jung's most extensive commentary on a biblical text. Here, he confronts the story of the man who challenged God, the man who experienced hell on earth and still did not reject his faith. Job's journey parallels Jung's own experience--as reported in The Red Book: Liber Novus--of descending into the depths of his own unconscious, confronting and reconciling the rejected aspects of his soul. This paperback edition of Jung's classic work includes a new foreword by Sonu Shamdasani, Philemon Professor of Jung History at University College London. Described by Shamdasani as "the theology behind The Red Book," Answer to Job examines the symbolic role that theological concepts play in an individual's psychic life.


The Bible and the Psyche

The Bible and the Psyche

Author: Edward F. Edinger

Publisher:

Published: 1986

Total Pages: 182

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Explores Biblical lore as a self-revelation of the objective psyche and a rich compendium of archetypal images representing humanity's successive encounters with the numinosum (a.k.a. God, the Self, etc.) Many examples from dreams and more than forty years of clinical practice.