Emotiotionality booms. Presently feelings and emotions play a major role in many scientific fields. The same is true for contemporary endeavours to discern and describe religious phenomena within religious studies. Theology has, however, only little to offer to an interdisciplinary theory of emotion. There are few classic theological approaches to the topic of religious feelings because past and contemporary theological reflection all too often restricts itself to cognitive concepts of religion. Religion is mostly seen as an individual's rational way of meaning-making in order to find guidelines to his or her actions. Thereby important aspects of religious practise are ignored.This book documents different empirical and non-empirical attempts to theorize emotion. It is asked whether there are any emotions and feelings that are in themselves religious? If this is the case, in what way do they differ from non-religious emotions and feelings? What is the relation between a religious idea and the emotion that is connected to it? Are ideas antecedent or do feelings come first? Which ideas work as triggers of wich particular religious affections?
Contributions by: Roderich Barth, Sabine A. Döring, Volker Gerhardt, Hans-Günter Heimbrock, Elisabeth Gräb-Schmidt, Dietrich Korsch, Andreas Feldtkeller, Hubert Knoblauch, Georg Northoff, Martina Kumlehn, Martin Krumlehn, Jan Hermelink, Thomas Schlag, Albrecht Grözinger, Kristian Fechtner, Hans-Martin Gutmann, Rolf Schieder, Frank Thomas Brinkmann, Jörg Herrmann, Jörg Metelmann, Kristin Merle, Ursula Roth, Friedrich Schweitzer, Anja Berninger, Regine Herbrik, Annette Haußmann