Veldsman, Daniel Petrus2011-04-282011-04-282010-09Veldsman, DP 2010, 'God, Moses and Levinas : on being the other and relating to the other. A perspective on transcendence from religious experience', NGTT: Dutch Reformed Theological Journal / Nederduitse Gereformeerde Teologiese Tydskrif, vol. 51, no. 3&4, pp. 177-184. [http://www.journals.co.za/ej/ejour_ngtt.html]0028-2006http://hdl.handle.net/2263/16376Within the context of religious experience, understood as testimony to transcendence (Stoker), this article focus on a specific constitutive element thereof, namely intentionality. It is discussed as concept in relation to three other concepts, namely religious experience, experience and transcendence. To elaborate on the importance of the qualification of the concept of intentionality, three conversation partners are engaged. The French Jewish philosopher and Talmudic commentator Emmanuel Levinas (1906-1995) since his viewpoint on “The (O)other” makes the concept of “transcendence” problematic in a very insightful manner. The Dutch philosopher of religion Wessel Stoker and his proposal for “trans-intentionality” as a constitutive element of religious experience, and the experience of Moses with God as narrated in Ex 3. The contributions on transcendence by Levinas and Stoker are finally critically evaluated in relation to the Moses experience.enTeologiese Fakulteit, Universiteit van StellenboschTranscendence of GodIntentionality (Philosophy)Experience (Religion)Moses (Biblical leader) in the New TestamentLevinas, Emmanuel -- InfluenceStoker, W. (Wessel) -- InfluenceGod, Moses and Levinas : on being the other and relating to the other. A perspective on transcendence from religious experienceArticle