reflective slow-paced

not for the faint of heart. heavy philosophy, but rewarding read for those interested in theodicy/modern phenomenology.

The third of his dense but absorbing works I've made it through, and this then first in his Philosophical Triduum. Astonishing passages in parts 33 to 37 or so, and 57 to around 63, and he confronts the terror many of us feel trapped in our mortal, God-given finitude, and the violent rupture Christ came to accept as his incarnation ended on Calvary. This as all his work shows Falque moving between exegesis, explanation and interpretation in subtle ways, often demanding close rereading. Quite a bold journey.