Notes

  1. . Richard Rubenstein, My Brother Paul (New York: Harper & Row, 1972).
  2. . Richard Rubenstein, After Aushwitz: Radical Theology and Contemporary Judaism (Indianapolis: Bobbs‐Merrill Co., 1966).
  3. . Ernest A. Rappaport, Anti‐Judaism: A Psychohistory (Chicago: Perspective Press, 1975). Characterizing anti‐Semitism as being grounded in paranoid schizophrenia, the author traces the history of anti‐Semitism from Paul through Luther to Adolf Hitler.
  4. . Sidney Tarachow, “St. Paul and Early Christianity: A Psychoanalytic and Historical Study,” in Pscychoanalysis and the Social Sciences, ed. G. Roheim, W. Muensterberger, anti S. Axelrad, vols. 1–5 (New York: International Universities Press, 1947–58), 4:276.
  5. . See the excellent discussion of the dangers of inflation which are involved in an encounter with the archetype of Christ in Edward F. Edinger's Ego and Archetype (Baltimore: Penguin Books, 1972). Edinger's treatment of Christian dogma should be read as a Jungian parallel to the previous Freudian discussion.
  6. . See my “From Resignation to Exaltation: A Psychological Study of Authority and Initiative in the Life and Thought of John Wesley” (PhD. diss., University of Chicago, 1975), esp. the chap. entitled “Wesley's Theology and the Problem of Initiative.”