Abstract
F. LeRon Shults is certain that “theology is simply too important to leave to theists”. From the beginning, Shults comes out with his Deleuzian hammer swinging, the goal: no icon, no political or psychological transcendence, and no Nietzschian priestly influence left standing. At its core, this text is an exploration in how Deleuze’s devilish interest in religion can be activated as an apparatus to expand the range of thinking, acting, and feeling, to find the “transcendental conditions for the real experience of creating new values”. The project here is to liberate theology from its moorings and view it in its proper frame as “the science of nonexisting entities,” that is, under the...