As a result of the isolation of doctrinal theology from its roots in Christian spiritual life, the relationship between spirituality and theology is often perceived to be ambiguous and uneasy.Preface.
Part I: Issues of History and Method.
1. Spirituality and Theology: The Questions at Issue.
2. Mystery and Doctrine: The Historical Integrity of Spirituality and Theology.
3. Recovering the Mystical Element of Theology: The Twentieth-Century Examples of Rahner and von Balthasar.
4. Theological Hermeneutics and Spiritual Texts.
Part II: Mystical Theology in Practice.
5. Trinitarian Self-Abandon and the Problem of Divine Suffering.
6. The Hiddenness of God and the Self-Understanding of Jesus.
7. Love for the Other and Discovery of the Self.
Index.
McIntosh offers a fruitful avenue for overcoming the split between theology and spirituality that has emerged in contemporary Christianity. His mastery of the history of mystical theology is insightful and impressive. His hermeneutical strategy, developed both in its theoretical and practical dimensions, makes a major contribution to the recent study of mysticism.
Bernard McGinn, University of Chicago
Mystical Theology is one of the most sustained, systematic and impressive attempts at uniting spirituality and dogma, and demonstrating the necessity of this union, that I have encountered. Brian Horne, Kings College London
The book is a sound exploration of the Christian mystical tradition. The strength of McIntosh's work is its attention to the postmodern question of the other, both human and divine. In short, McIntosh aptly shows that the mlS‘