Resumo:
This thesis has as its presupposition the understanding that the present time   named 
the  contemporary     displays  a  paradoxical  character,  which  is  justified  through  the 
simultaneity of  illuminist and post-modern worldviews. Such paradoxical character demands 
a  paradoxical  hermeneutics  that  may  become  the  foundation  to  the  construction  of  a 
hermeneutics of care, with a special focus on pastoral care. The work starts by noting certain 
confusion  in  the notions of modernity and post-modernity,  in order to present  the concept of 
the contemporary. The contemporary collapses the illuminist and the post-modern worldviews 
and  creates  the  possibility  to  investigate  three  relationships  in  contemporary  hermeneutics:  
the  first one  is  the  relationship between closed-disclosed under  the  sign of  re-velation. This 
concept  of  revelation  stands  in  contrast  to  the  illuminist  one     identical  to  the  Hegelian 
Offenbarung. Karl Barth and Heidegger open the way at this juncture. The second relationship 
investigates  the  possibilities  of  a  hermeneutics  built  on  the  dialectic  between  tradition  and 
emergence, memory and the forgotten.  The third relationship has its focus on a hermeneutics 
under the dialectic between action and affection. It will show the dangers of an epistemology 
solely  based  on  action     prone  to  a  strong  metaphysical  thought     and  the  need  of  an 
epistemology  also  based  on  being  affected.  In  this  way  it  will  accomplish  the  task  of 
launching the foundations for a new contemporary hermeneutics. The second part of the thesis 
starts from this contemporary hermeneutics that sees all reality, texts and people, as the object 
of  interpretation. Therefore,  it  tries  to understand  the nuances  that define  the texts  in motion 
(people),  in  order  to  propose  a  hermeneutics  of  pastoral  care.  Its  starting  point  is  the 
Heideggerian concept of care as a mode of being human. The second step is a discussion of, 
based on 2 Corinthians 3:1-3, the hermeneutics of the living letters, metaphor that is taken as 
a  hermeneutical  model.  The  metaphor  of  the  living  letters  emphasizes  the  being-ness  of human beings and settles  the basis for such a hermeneutics. The notions of world, other and 
Other   as constitutive of human being   also serve as a foundation  to  the being-ness of  the 
pastoral  care.  Finally,  the  thesis  proposes  three  hermeneutical  dimensions  of  pastoral  care, 
built  on  the  paradoxical  relationships  displayed  by  the  dialectics  between  action-affection; 
tradition-emergence; closed-disclosed.