"The cross of Christ is not, after all, simply an eternal validation of pain and death, but their overthrow. If all the tribulations of this world were to be written off as calculably necessary contributions to redemption -- part of the great "balance" of things -- then Christ's sacrifice would not be a unique saving act so much as the metaphysical ground for a universe of "sacrifice," wherein suffering and death are part of the sublime and inevitable fabric of finitude; and divine providence would be indistinguishable from fate."
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Philosophers from the United StatesEssayists from the United StatesChristian apologistsSocialists from the United StatesChristian socialists
Original Language: English
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Chapter 2, Location 666
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/David_Bentley_Hart
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David Bentley Hart
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