RA is organized around the assumption of the opposition, I might even say the "mortal" opposition, between religion and materialism. The question of whether there might be a religious materialism is never raised, although it is fair to say that that is today one of the most common subjects of theological debate, which is only one of the many times this books brushes up against theological issues with which it is completely unfamiliar. In fact, in my view and that of a good many other religious theorists today, religion is not opposed to time and temporality, but religion is a material practice, a mode of temporalization and historicization, of miserable and glorious bodies, of children and land, which are all primarily Biblical categories that rarely come up in Greek philosophy except as matters to be subordinated and governed. One sign of this is Heidegger‘s Being and Time which formalizes a mode of being-in-the-world that is at root, or structurally, Augustinian and Lutheran—or conversely, and this is the way Heidegger would prefer to put it, the way a certain Augustine or Luther is a "de-formalization" of the existentialia of Being and Time. Indeed, the very word déconstruction arises as a translation or gloss on Heidegger‘s Destruktion, which is itself a translation of Luther‘s destructio of scholastic theology back down to its Scriptural sources, which itself is traceable to the Septuagint apolo in Isaiah 29:14 (see I Cor. 1:19), and crucial to the analysis of time in Being and Time. Badiou‘s use of St. Paul, whom he interprets in terms of the truth-making event, while dismissing the actual content this event (the resurrected Christ) provides a more recent example. This leads to the question of which came first, the religious form of life or the philosopheme, the ontology or the "unavowed" theology. It was considerations of just this sort that led Derrida to speak of a religion without the doctrines and dogmas of religion, and this lay behind his musings on the relative priority of the messianic and the concrete messianisms or the "unavowed theologemes" that lay behind philosophy.The solution to doubts about materialism is to take a long walk on a short pier.