Das Christentum bei C. G. Jung
Philosophische Grundlagen, psychologische Prämissen und Konsequenzen für die therapeutische Praxis
Henryk Machon
The book is historical-systematical. The author presents in interdisciplinary – philosophical, psychological and theological – perspective understandingly, sympathizingly, but also critically the function of Christianity in C.G. Jung. For him, the human being is inherently religious and experiences God in his soul. Consequently, the essence of Christianity lies in the experience in which the believer is overwhelmed by unconscious forces. Therefore, religious experience is an experience of archetypes of the collective unconsciousness, which means that God and the unconscious in the religious experience cannot be distinguished. Jung regards religion as true if it heals the diseases of the soul. They treat because the healing powers of the unconscious are exceedingly fertile.