Cur Deus Homo vs Homo Deus and the Evolution of Humanity: Quo Vadis?

This article deals with the profound shifts that are taking place in light of the Fourth Industrial Revolution, in which humanity’s future is highly topical. The article engages Thomas Merton’s re-evaluation of Anselm’s Cur Homo Deo with Harari’s book Homo Deus (2015) and argues that, while we must...

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Main Author: P. Langerman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of the Free State 2024-12-01
Series:Acta Theologica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/at/article/view/8155
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author P. Langerman
author_facet P. Langerman
author_sort P. Langerman
collection DOAJ
description This article deals with the profound shifts that are taking place in light of the Fourth Industrial Revolution, in which humanity’s future is highly topical. The article engages Thomas Merton’s re-evaluation of Anselm’s Cur Homo Deo with Harari’s book Homo Deus (2015) and argues that, while we must take Harari’s views seriously, thefuture evolution of humanity is not the human godsuggested by Harari, but that suggested by Merton, who argues that the incarnation shows God’s love for creation; shows Christ as the pattern of what it means to live a holy life, and, ultimately, shows the future of both the cosmos and humanity, where all is taken into the very heart of God. Harari views the future as the creation of a benevolent human god; Merton views the future as a place where all of creation is divinised.
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spelling doaj-art-01e2de970f074e87a6390957f41a0aeb2025-02-11T09:27:29ZengUniversity of the Free StateActa Theologica1015-87582309-90892024-12-0144210.38140/at.v44i2.8155Cur Deus Homo vs Homo Deus and the Evolution of Humanity: Quo Vadis?P. Langerman0Stellenbosch University This article deals with the profound shifts that are taking place in light of the Fourth Industrial Revolution, in which humanity’s future is highly topical. The article engages Thomas Merton’s re-evaluation of Anselm’s Cur Homo Deo with Harari’s book Homo Deus (2015) and argues that, while we must take Harari’s views seriously, thefuture evolution of humanity is not the human godsuggested by Harari, but that suggested by Merton, who argues that the incarnation shows God’s love for creation; shows Christ as the pattern of what it means to live a holy life, and, ultimately, shows the future of both the cosmos and humanity, where all is taken into the very heart of God. Harari views the future as the creation of a benevolent human god; Merton views the future as a place where all of creation is divinised. https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/at/article/view/8155Thomas Merton4IRHumanityIncarnation
spellingShingle P. Langerman
Cur Deus Homo vs Homo Deus and the Evolution of Humanity: Quo Vadis?
Acta Theologica
Thomas Merton
4IR
Humanity
Incarnation
title Cur Deus Homo vs Homo Deus and the Evolution of Humanity: Quo Vadis?
title_full Cur Deus Homo vs Homo Deus and the Evolution of Humanity: Quo Vadis?
title_fullStr Cur Deus Homo vs Homo Deus and the Evolution of Humanity: Quo Vadis?
title_full_unstemmed Cur Deus Homo vs Homo Deus and the Evolution of Humanity: Quo Vadis?
title_short Cur Deus Homo vs Homo Deus and the Evolution of Humanity: Quo Vadis?
title_sort cur deus homo vs homo deus and the evolution of humanity quo vadis
topic Thomas Merton
4IR
Humanity
Incarnation
url https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/at/article/view/8155
work_keys_str_mv AT plangerman curdeushomovshomodeusandtheevolutionofhumanityquovadis