tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2370391510073569760.post5056504963615318849..comments2013-03-12T23:17:22.169-07:00Comments on Caffeinated Theophanies: A Confession, Eccumenicism and ProximityRuthhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14957413212218945301noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2370391510073569760.post-59039347621642393202010-04-27T17:16:43.539-07:002010-04-27T17:16:43.539-07:00Amen sister Ruth! Nice development of your own tho...Amen sister Ruth! Nice development of your own thoughts and Caputo's.<br /><br />I'm curious about your ending though. Do you think there can be more or less harmful "remembering[s]" of the past now as Christians? And how should we relate to Christians that "remember" in harmful ways? Beyond a tolerance and encounter with their otherness.<br /><br />Or let me pose it another way. Certainly, in a Derridean sense, we are responsible to the other. But aren't we responsible to every other? And if so, isn't my tolerance of one other often a betrayal of an other who suffers because of that other? Do we have a responsibility before memories that can cause harm to others?Wildflowerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00595612308425401053noreply@blogger.com