Opulence and Simplicity: The Question of Tension in Syrian Catholicism

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Standard

Opulence and Simplicity : The Question of Tension in Syrian Catholicism. / Bandak, Andreas.

The Anthropology of Catholicism: A Reader. ed. / Kristin Norget; Valentina Napolitano; Maya Mayblin. Berkeley, CA : University of California Press, 2017. p. 155-169.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Bandak, A 2017, Opulence and Simplicity: The Question of Tension in Syrian Catholicism. in K Norget, V Napolitano & M Mayblin (eds), The Anthropology of Catholicism: A Reader. University of California Press, Berkeley, CA, pp. 155-169.

APA

Bandak, A. (2017). Opulence and Simplicity: The Question of Tension in Syrian Catholicism. In K. Norget, V. Napolitano, & M. Mayblin (Eds.), The Anthropology of Catholicism: A Reader (pp. 155-169). University of California Press.

Vancouver

Bandak A. Opulence and Simplicity: The Question of Tension in Syrian Catholicism. In Norget K, Napolitano V, Mayblin M, editors, The Anthropology of Catholicism: A Reader. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. 2017. p. 155-169

Author

Bandak, Andreas. / Opulence and Simplicity : The Question of Tension in Syrian Catholicism. The Anthropology of Catholicism: A Reader. editor / Kristin Norget ; Valentina Napolitano ; Maya Mayblin. Berkeley, CA : University of California Press, 2017. pp. 155-169

Bibtex

@inbook{8c9ee95015de49bab9fbb1b38e5e9cf1,
title = "Opulence and Simplicity: The Question of Tension in Syrian Catholicism",
abstract = "In various forms of Catholicism sacrifice holds a central position. The centrality of the divine sacrifice literally embodied in the sacrament of the Eucharist works in a wider sense as a model for action and thought outside the Church as a place for worship. Sacrifice here places the individual in various positions of moral debt that one can more-or-less willingly work towards suspending. In Damascus, Syria, a popular Catholic ethic of simplicity often collides with clergy who appear to collect money for this-worldly purposes or for the sake of what is perceived as their own benefit. Lamentation over such perceived opulence attests to a tension between grace, gift, and debt. This chapter explores such tension in attending to how moral personhood is fashioned through various engagements with prayer, surrender, and debt. Where David Morgan has argued for a particular Catholic sacrificial economy (2009), wherein individuals are placed in charged relationships, this chapter examines the inherent tension between simplicity and opulence. Catholicism, it argues, may very well work by asserting a particular emphasis on the holy office that appear opulent, which necessitates a counter-movement in the form of purification and work towards greater simplicity.",
author = "Andreas Bandak",
year = "2017",
month = feb,
day = "27",
language = "English",
isbn = "0520288440",
pages = "155--169",
editor = "Kristin Norget and Valentina Napolitano and Maya Mayblin",
booktitle = "The Anthropology of Catholicism: A Reader",
publisher = "University of California Press",
address = "United States",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Opulence and Simplicity

T2 - The Question of Tension in Syrian Catholicism

AU - Bandak, Andreas

PY - 2017/2/27

Y1 - 2017/2/27

N2 - In various forms of Catholicism sacrifice holds a central position. The centrality of the divine sacrifice literally embodied in the sacrament of the Eucharist works in a wider sense as a model for action and thought outside the Church as a place for worship. Sacrifice here places the individual in various positions of moral debt that one can more-or-less willingly work towards suspending. In Damascus, Syria, a popular Catholic ethic of simplicity often collides with clergy who appear to collect money for this-worldly purposes or for the sake of what is perceived as their own benefit. Lamentation over such perceived opulence attests to a tension between grace, gift, and debt. This chapter explores such tension in attending to how moral personhood is fashioned through various engagements with prayer, surrender, and debt. Where David Morgan has argued for a particular Catholic sacrificial economy (2009), wherein individuals are placed in charged relationships, this chapter examines the inherent tension between simplicity and opulence. Catholicism, it argues, may very well work by asserting a particular emphasis on the holy office that appear opulent, which necessitates a counter-movement in the form of purification and work towards greater simplicity.

AB - In various forms of Catholicism sacrifice holds a central position. The centrality of the divine sacrifice literally embodied in the sacrament of the Eucharist works in a wider sense as a model for action and thought outside the Church as a place for worship. Sacrifice here places the individual in various positions of moral debt that one can more-or-less willingly work towards suspending. In Damascus, Syria, a popular Catholic ethic of simplicity often collides with clergy who appear to collect money for this-worldly purposes or for the sake of what is perceived as their own benefit. Lamentation over such perceived opulence attests to a tension between grace, gift, and debt. This chapter explores such tension in attending to how moral personhood is fashioned through various engagements with prayer, surrender, and debt. Where David Morgan has argued for a particular Catholic sacrificial economy (2009), wherein individuals are placed in charged relationships, this chapter examines the inherent tension between simplicity and opulence. Catholicism, it argues, may very well work by asserting a particular emphasis on the holy office that appear opulent, which necessitates a counter-movement in the form of purification and work towards greater simplicity.

M3 - Book chapter

SN - 0520288440

SN - 978-0520288447

SP - 155

EP - 169

BT - The Anthropology of Catholicism: A Reader

A2 - Norget, Kristin

A2 - Napolitano, Valentina

A2 - Mayblin, Maya

PB - University of California Press

CY - Berkeley, CA

ER -

ID: 169409848