Political Theology Concept
(Redirected from Theological Politics)
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A Political Theology Concept is a theoretical concept that examines the intersection of religious thought and political authority, particularly how theological ideas shape and legitimize political structures.
- AKA: Theological Politics, Sacred Politics Concept, Divine Authority Theory, Religious Political Theory.
- Context:
- It can typically analyze Sovereignty Legitimation through divine authority claims.
- It can often explore Secularization Processes as theological concept transfers.
- It can typically examine Exception State Theory as miracle analogue.
- It can often reveal Hidden Theological Structures in secular institutions.
- It can range from being a Conservative Political Theology Concept to being a Revolutionary Political Theology Concept, depending on its political orientation.
- It can range from being a Christian Political Theology Concept to being a Islamic Political Theology Concept, depending on its religious tradition.
- It can range from being a Explicit Political Theology Concept to being a Implicit Political Theology Concept, depending on its theological visibility.
- It can range from being a Ancient Political Theology Concept to being a Modern Political Theology Concept, depending on its historical period.
- ...
- Examples:
- Classical Political Theology Concepts, such as:
- Modern Political Theology Concepts, such as:
- ...
- Counter-Examples:
- Secular Political Theory, which excludes theological foundation.
- Scientific Governance Theory, which relies on empirical method.
- Materialist Political Analysis, which rejects spiritual dimension.
- See: Carl Schmitt, Libido Dominandi, Tranquillitas Ordinis, Dispensational Antichrist Interpretation, Augustine of Hippo, Thomas Hobbes, Sovereignty Theory.