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<metadata xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"><dc:title>Christian incarnation in the age of digital disembodiment</dc:title><dc:creator>Klun,	Branko	(Avtor)
	</dc:creator><dc:subject>Christian antropology</dc:subject><dc:subject>embodiment</dc:subject><dc:subject>digital culture</dc:subject><dc:subject>transhumanism</dc:subject><dc:subject>incarnation</dc:subject><dc:subject>relationality</dc:subject><dc:description>In an age increasingly shaped by digital mediation, technological abstraction, and reductive conceptions of the human body, this article explores the concept of Christian embodiment as an important counter-narrative. Drawing on biblical anthropology, Jewish thought, and Christian doctrines such as the incarnation and resurrection, it asserts that the body is not merely a technical obstacle or biological fact, but a place of gift, relation, and vocation. it is through the body that human personhood is expressed, love is enacted, and communion with others becomes possible. The article critically engages with contemporary cultural tendencies such as transhumanism, posthumanism, and digital self-optimization, while offering a theological vision in which the fullness of life is realized not through the transcend-ence of the body, but through its transfiguration in love. Rooted in gratitude and relationship, Christian embodiment encourages a renewed ethic of presence in a world increasingly threatened by disembodiment.</dc:description><dc:date>2025</dc:date><dc:date>2025-12-22 12:40:32</dc:date><dc:type>Neznano</dc:type><dc:identifier>24846</dc:identifier><dc:identifier>UDK: 128.5:27</dc:identifier><dc:identifier>ISSN pri članku: 1318-8828</dc:identifier><dc:identifier>DOI: 10.35469/poligrafi.2025.513</dc:identifier><dc:identifier>COBISS_ID: 262530563</dc:identifier><dc:language>sl</dc:language></metadata>
