Post-monotheism
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In the philosophy of religion and theology, post-monotheism (from Greek Template:Lang "one" and Template:Lang "god," with the Latin prefix "post-" as in "after" or "beyond") is a term covering a range of different meanings that nonetheless share concern for the status of faith and religious experience in the modern or post-modern era. There is no one originator for the term. Rather, it has independently appeared in the writings of several intellectuals on the Internet and in print. Its most notable use has been in the poetry of Palestinian author Nidaa Khoury, and as a label for a "new sensibility" or theological approach proposed by the Islamic historian Christopher Schwartz.
See also
- Abrahamic religions
- Christian theology
- Deconstruction-and-religion
- God is dead
- Ineffability
- Islamic theology
- Nontheism
- Open theism
- Post-theism
- Problem of evil
- Religion
- Theism
- Theodicy
- Transtheistic
