TY - GEN AU - Spangenberg,Izak AU - Landman,Christina AU - Spangenberg,Izak AU - Landman,Christina TI - The legacies of Albert Schweitzer reconsidered SN - aosis.2016.tlasr11 PY - 2016/// CY - Durbanville PB - AOSIS KW - The historical Jesus KW - bicssc KW - Ethical issues & debates KW - Philosophy & theory of education KW - promotion of peace KW - albert schweitzer KW - quest for historical jesus KW - medical healing KW - enlightenment KW - injustice KW - civilization KW - ethical mysticism KW - consumerism KW - ethics KW - african development KW - religious healing KW - reverence for life KW - educational thought KW - ecological crisis KW - materialism KW - “greening” of christianity KW - post -colonialism KW - african humanism KW - ethical awareness KW - new testament KW - compassion KW - indigenous people KW - social relations KW - african academic biblical interpretation KW - colonisation KW - environment KW - moral imperialism KW - gaia hypothesis KW - non-violence KW - responsible citizenship KW - Africa KW - Albert Schweitzer KW - Ethics KW - Historical Jesus KW - Jesus KW - Reverence for Life N1 - Open Access N2 - This book on the legacy of Albert Schweitzer contextualises this remarkable intellectualist, humanist, medicine-man, theologian and Nobel Prize winner. This collected work is aimed at specialists in the humanities, social sciences, education, and religious studies. The authors embrace philanthropic values to benefit Africa and the world at large. The publication engages with peers on the relevance of Schweitzer’s work for humanitarian values in Africa. The essays in the book stimulate further research in the various fields in which Schweitzer excelled. Its academic contribution is its focus on the post-colonial discourse in contemporary discussions both in South Africa and Africa at large. The book emphasises Schweitzer’s reverence for life philosophy and demonstrates how this impacts on moral values. However, the book also points to the possibility that Schweitzer’s reverence for life philosophy is embedded in a typically European appreciation of ‘mysticism’ that is not commensurate with African indigenous religious values. From an African academic perspective, the book advocates the view that Schweitzer’s concept of the reverence for life supports not only the Biblical notion of imago Dei but also the African humanist values of the preservation and protection of life, criticising the exploitation of the environment by warring factions and large companies, especially in oil-producing African countries. It also argues that Schweitzer’s disposition on ethics was influenced by the Second World War, his sentiments against nuclear weapons and his resistance to the Enlightenment view of ‘civilisation’. With regard to Jesus studies the book elucidates values promoted by Schweitzer by following in Jesus’ steps and portraying Jesus’ message within a modern world view. Taken over from Schweitzer, the book argues that Jesus’ moral authority resides in his display of love and his interaction with the poor and marginalised. The book demonstrates Schweitzer’s understanding of Jesus as the one who sacrifices his own life to bring the Kingdom of God to realisation in this world. The book commends Schweitzer’s insight that we know Jesus through his toils on the one hand, and through our own experiences on the other. It is in a mixture between the two that the hermeneutical gap between then and now is bridged. It is precisely in bridging this gap that Schweitzer sees himself as an instrument of God’s healing. It defines Schweitzer as the embodiment of being a healer, educationalist and herald of the greening of Christianity. His philosophy on the reverence for life prepares a foundation for Christians to think ‘green’ about human life within a greater environment. He advocates aspects of education such as lifelong learning, holistic education and a problem-based approach to education. Finally, the book analyses both critically and appreciatively Albert Schweitzer’s contribution to the concepts of religious healing prevalent in African Christianity today UR - https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/31812/1/625170.pdf UR - https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/31812/1/625170.pdf UR - https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/31812/1/625170.pdf UR - https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/32227 ER -