In his book God, Guilt, and Death, philosopher Merold Westphal categorizes religious sensibilities into three main classes to explain human responses to finitude: exilic, mimetic, and covenantal religion. These are structural classes of religious thought rather than rigid historical traditions.
1. Exilic Religion
Core View: Takes life in the material world to be an exile from the soul's true home.
Salvation: The process of returning to that spiritual home.
Key Focus: The divide between the transcendent/spiritual and the physical world, often viewing the latter as fallen or a place of alienation.
2. Mimetic Religion
Core View: Views life as normatively controlled by a right, harmonious relationship with nature.
Salvation: Achieved by rehearsing or participating in the origins and depths of nature, often guided by myth and ritual.
Key Focus: Cosmic order, cyclical time, and living in accordance with the rhythms of the natural universe.
3. Covenantal Religion
Core View: Adds a historical dimension to the cosmological focus of mimetic religion.
Salvation: Finds ultimate meaning in historical interactions between the divine and humanity, giving specific historical context to human guilt, death, and redemption.
Key Focus: Time as linear, historical responsibility, and moral obligations to a personal, active deity.
While Westphal uses these three categories to describe the phenomenology of religion, he also famously explored the Phenomenology of religion broadly, and examined how modern critiques of religion can function as a tool for Religious Belief.
If you are exploring Westphal's work, I [Mr AI] can:
Detail how these categories apply to specific traditions (e.g., how Christianity blends these elements).
Summarize his concepts of faith and reason.
Provide an overview of his views on the hermeneutics of suspicion (Marx, Nietzsche, Freud).
Let me know which of these you'd like to focus on! " [end of AI]