Table of Contents
Translator's Note xiii
Preface to the English-Language Edition xv
Opening: The Isenheim Altarpiece or "The Taking on Board of Suffering" xvii
Introduction: Shifting Understandings of Anxiety 1
Part I The Face-To-Face of Finitude
1 From the Burden of Death to Flight before Death 7
§1 The Burden of Death 7
§2 Fleeing from Death 8
2 The Face of Death or Anxiety over Finitude 10
§3 Death "for Us" Humans 10
§4 Genesis and Its Symbolism 11
§5 The Mask of Perfection 12
§6 The Image of Finitude in Man 13
§7 Finitude: Finite and Infinite 16
§8 Finitude and Anxiety 16
§9 The Eclipse of Finitude 17
§10 The Face of Death 18
§11 To Die "with," 19
3 The Temptation of Despair or Anxiety over Sin 22
§13 Inevitable Death 22
§14 The Conquest of Sin 22
§15 Sin and Anxiety 23
§16 The Temptation of Despair 24
4 From the Affirmation of Meaninglessness to the Suspension of Meaning 26
§17 The Life Sentence 26
§18 The Christian Witness 27
§19 Meaninglessness and the Suspension of Meaning 27
Part II Christ Faced with Anxiety over Death
§20 Two Meditations on Death 29
§21 Alarm and Anxiety 31
5 The Fear of Dying and Christ's "Alarm" 33
§22 Taking on Fear and Abandonment 33
§23 The Cup, Sadness, and Sleep 34
§24 Resignation, Waiting, and Heroism 35
§25 The Silence at the End 36
§26 The Scenarios of Death 37
§27 The Triple Failure of the Staging 38
§28 From Alarm to Anxiety 39
6 God's Vigil 41
§29 Remaining Always Awake 41
§30 The Passage of Death, the Present of the Passion, the Future of the Resurrection 42
§31 Theological Actuality and Phenomenological Possibility 43
7 The Narrow Road of Anxiety 45
§32 Indefiniteness, Reduction to Nothing, and Isolation 45
§33 The Strait Gate 46
§34 Anxiety over "Simply Death," 47
§35 Indefiniteness (Putting off the Cup) and the Powerless Power of God 47
§36 Reduction to Nothing and Kenosis 52
§37 The Isolation of Humankind and Communion with the Father 54
§38 Of Anxiety Endured on the Horizon of Death 55
8 Death and Its Possibilities 57
§39 Manner of Living, Possibility of the Impossibility, and Death as "Mineness," 57
§40 Being Vigilant at Gethsemane 59
§41 From the Actuality of the Corpse to Possibilities for the Living 60
§42 The Death That Is Always His: Suffering in God; The Gift of His Life and Refusal of Mastery 63
§43 The Flesh Forgotten 66
Part III The Body-to-Body of Suffering and Death
§44 Disappropriation and Incarnation 69
§45 Embedding in the Flesh and Burial in the Earth 70
9 From Self-Relinquishment to the Entry into the Flesh 73
§46 Suffering the World 73
§47 Living in the World 74
§48 Otherness and Corruptibility 74
§49 Self Relinquishment 75
§50 Passing to the Father 76
§51 Oneself as an Other 77
§52 Destitution and Auto-Affection 78
§53 Alterity and Fraternity 79
§54 Entry into the Flesh 80
§55 The Anxiety "in" the Flesh 81
§56 Toward Dumb Experience 82
10 Suffering Occluded 84
§57 An Opportunity Thwarted 84
§58 Called into Question 86
§59 Toward a Phenomenology of Suffering 86
11 Suffering Incarnate 88
§60 Perceiving, or the Challenge of the Toucher-Touching 88
§61 The Modes of the Incarnate Being 91
§62 The Excess of the Suffering Body 94
12 The Revealing Sword 97
§63 Sobbing and Tears 97
§64 Fleshly Exodus 99
§65 The Vulnerable Flesh 100
§66 The Non-Substitutable Substitution 101
§67 The Act of Surrendering Oneself 103
§68 Toward a Revelation 104
§69 Useless Suffering 104
Conclusion: The In-Fans [without-Speech] or the Silent Flesh 107
Epilogue; From One Triptych to Another 111
Notes 115
Index 157