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      religion-online Mystery and Promise: A Theology of Revelation by John F. Haught 
 John F. Haught, who received the Ph.D. from Catholic University, is professor of theology at Georgetown University. He has written extensively on religion and science. His books include The Revelation of God in History; What is God?, The Cosmic Adventure, Nature and Propose, and Religion and Self-Acceptance. Published by The Liturgical Press, Collegeville, Minnesota, 1993. This material was prepared for Religion Online by Ted and Winnie Brock. 
 Chapter 1: The Gift of an ImageThe image of a self-emptying, fully relational God seems to lie at the very heart of Christian revelation. It is the underlying dynamism of the doctrine of the Trinity.
 Chapter 2: Revelation TheologyCatholic revelation theology is outlined. Today most Catholic theologians, along with an increasing number of Protestants, interpret revelation fundamentally as God’s personal self-gift to the world.
 Chapter 3: MysteryIt is at the limits of our experience and problem-oriented questioning that we consciously come up against the truly incomprehensible and uncontrollable mystery to which our lives are inherently open.
 Chapter 4: Religion and RevelationReligion in its entirety can be viewed as the disclosure of a transcendent mystery. In our culture we call this mystery "God."
 Chapter 5: PromiseThe revelatory image of a self-emptying God explains not only the fact of reality’s mysterious openness but also why mystery presents itself to us in the mode of a promising future.
 Chapter 6: Jesus and the VisionWe are first brought to an explicit sense of sacred mystery through sacraments or symbols. To Christian faith, Jesus himself is the primary sacrament of our encounter with the divine mystery of promise.
 Chapter 7: The Congregation of HopeBiblical inspiration is the effect of God’s promise on individuals writing within the context of a community of faith brought into existence and sustained by a vision of promise emanating from the Spirit of hope.
 Chapter 8: Revelation and the CosmosIf we could learn to see the universe as the story of the unfolding of God’s promise we could then integrate our hope in the promise with the vigorous environmental concern that is needed today if life is to survive on this planet.
 Chapter 9: The Meaning of HistoryThe revelation of God is experienced in connection with significant historical events that take place in the life of the faith community. But it is the "word of God" that interprets these events and allows us to see in them a promise of future fulfillment.
 Chapter 10: Revelation and the SelfBy our faith in the God who identifies with Jesus, the God who is inseparable from the man forsaken and abandoned on the cross, we announce not only a revolution in our fundamental image of mystery, but also a drastic revision of our self-understanding.
 Chapter 11: Reason and RevelationTo admit that our ideas require public verification does not mean that the scientific forum, or any academic context for that matter, is the best one in which to test the truth of revelation’s substance. An ecclesial community would be more appropriate.
 ConclusionThe manifestation of God’s being in our world cannot occur apart from situations of social and economic inclusiveness. The glory of God is obscured and remains unrevealed to the extent that poverty, division, and oppression still reign. Where justice, unity, and love prevail, there God is revealed.
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