Skip to main content

Free US delivery on orders $35 or over

Mortality, Ontology and Ethics in Twentieth-Century Theologies of Person

The Rule of Death

Mortality, Ontology and Ethics in Twentieth-Century Theologies of Person cover

Mortality, Ontology and Ethics in Twentieth-Century Theologies of Person

The Rule of Death

Quantity
Pre-order. Available May 14 2026
$103.50 RRP $115.00 Website price saving $11.50 (10%)

Payment for this pre-order will be taken when the item becomes available

Description

This book considers what it means to die.

Trew achieves this through the prism of two significant twentieth century thinkers: Dietrich Bonhoeffer and Christos Yannaras. In doing so, he continues an esteemed tradition of works considering the theology and philosophy of death, including Karl Rahner's On the Theology of Death and Martin Heidegger's Being and Time. However, Trew is also breaking new ground: this is the first English language book to compare the late Christos Yannaras with major western theologians, making this an innovative and ecumenical work.

Different as they are, both Bonhoeffer and Yannaras are well-known for their robustly relational views of human existence. Trew elegantly guides us through a systematic unfolding of how they both believe that, in and through Christ and his church, human life stands newly formed and empowered before the radical individuation of death.

Bonhoeffer and Yannaras both see in the means for modern theological anthropology to address the asymmetrical togetherness of historical existence and divine transcendence. Trew highlights how this is crucial for a redescription of what individual death might mean in the context of the church as 'communion'. In doing so, he constructively recasts Heidegger's best insights about anticipating death with Bohoeffer and Yannaras.

Ultimately, Trew powerfully argues for the Christological conversion of human creaturely passivity into recapitulative activity wherein human beings, by their 'daily dying' take up death's power and transfigure it into new life. Death becomes entangled within a distinctively and irreducibly relational vision of the human being.

Table of Contents

Introduction

1. The Person of Christ and Human Existence: Traditions, Ontologies, and the Meaning of Death

2. Church and Human Existence: Sacraments, Freedom, and Self-Giving

3. Human Existence and Death: Freedom and the Love of God

4. Is Death a Gift?

Bibliography

Index

Product details

Published May 14 2026
Format Hardback
Edition 1st
Extent 256
ISBN 9780567722591
Imprint T&T Clark
Dimensions 9 x 6 inches
Series T&T Clark Studies in Systematic Theology
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Author

Alex Michael Trew

Alex Michael Trew is Sessional Instructor in Philo…

Foreword

Rowan Williams

Rowan Williams is a former Archbishop of Canterbur…

Related Titles

Environment: Staging