Abstract:
In pursuit of counter-traditions that have read the Eden narrative without subscribing to the
Christian fall–redemption paradigm, this article engages Richard Kearney’s hermeneutical–
phenomenological reading of the imagination to explore new avenues for imagining sin and
salvation along post-metaphysical lines. The first section provides insights proceeding from an
intratextual reading of the Eden narrative. The second section proceeds to incorporate the
biblical and rabbinical concept of the yetser to elaborate the reading described above. The
section follows Kearney’s reading of the Eden narrative to elicit the imagination along ethical
lines as humanity’s passion for the possible. The third section reads the annunciation narrative
along these same lines, illustrating how a divine kingdom of justice and love is possibilised by
an imagination captured by divine promise and hospitality. By reading these two narratives
together through the lense of the imagination, novel ways of rethinking sin and salvation
along post-metaphysical lines emerge that portray salvation as human participation in God’s
ongoing creation of justice and love, thus enabling the God Who May Be.
INTRADISCIPLINARY AND/OR INTERDISCIPLINARY IMPLICATIONS : This article is relevant to the fields of
philosophy, philosophy of religion and theology. The narratives of fall and promise, previously
read by philosopher Richard Kearney in different contexts and not in relation to one another,
are read here from a decidedly theological point of view.