579 results on '"catholic theology"'
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2. The Church’s Relation to the Holy Scriptures according to John Webster
- Author
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Sławomir Zatwardnicki
- Subjects
kanoniczność ,teologia reformowana ,natchnienie ,authority of Scripture ,Religious studies ,ecclesiology ,ontologia Pisma Świętego ,Catholic theology ,eklezjologia ,creatura verbi domini ,Joseph Ratzinger ,ontology of Scripture ,autorytet Pisma Świętego ,inspiration ,teologia katolicka ,John Webster ,Reformed theology ,canonicity - Abstract
Problemem podjętym w artykule jest kwestia relacji Kościoła do Pisma Świętego w twórczości Johna Webstera. W pierwszej części zaprezentowano poglądy anglikańskiego teologa ukazujące ontologię Pisma Świętego w jej związku z eklezjologią, a w drugiej – poddano je krytycznej ocenie z perspektywy teologii katolickiej; w tym celu wykorzystano zwłaszcza teologię Josepha Ratzingera. Webster prezentuje Kościół jako creatura verbi divini, którego stałą cechą jest bycie słuchaczem viva vox Dei. W związku z tym proponuje ujmować Kościół w kategorii „duchowej widzialności”. Przyjmowana przez niego koncepcja Kościoła wiąże się z autorytetem Pisma Świętego jako narzędzia służącego Zmartwychwstałemu do wypowiadania teraźniejszego słowa za pośrednictwem natchnionych słów „proroków i apostołów”. Ten sam Duch Święty, który oświecał autorów natchnionych oraz dawał im natchnienie, odegrał również główną rolę w procesie formowania się kanonu. Uznanie kanoniczności było zdaniem Webstera przede wszystkim aktem recepcji oraz posłusznego przyjęcia daru Bożego. Wiele cennych spostrzeżeń uczonego może zostać zasymilowanych w teologii katolickiej, ale jedynie pod warunkiem „kontrreformacyjnego” odczytania poglądów myśliciela, którego refleksje są silnie znaczone teologią reformowaną. Ewentualne zużytkowanie myśli Webstera wiązałoby się z poszerzeniem rozumienia słowa Bożego, dowartościowaniem misterium Eklezji oraz postawieniem mocniejszego akcentu na przeszły wymiar tekstów biblijnych. The problem discussed in the article is the question of the relation of the Church to the Holy Scriptures in the works of John Webster. The first part presents the views of an Anglican theologian showing the ontology of the Scriptures in relation to ecclesiology. The second part critically evaluates them from the perspective of Catholic theology; for this purpose, in particular, Joseph Ratzinger’s theology was used. Webster presents the Church as a creatura verbi divini, whose constant feature is to be a listener of viva vox Dei. Therefore, he proposes to classify the Church in the category of “spiritual visibility.” The concept of the Church he adopted involves the authority of the Holy Scriptures as an instrument for the Risen Christ to express the present word through the inspired words of the “prophets and apostles”. The same Holy Spirit who enlightened the biblical authors and inspired them, also played a prime role in the formation of the canon. In Webster’s opinion, recognition of canonicity was, above all, an act of reception and an obedient acceptance of God’s gift. Many valuable insights of the scholar can be assimilated into Catholic theology, but only on the condition of a “counter-reformation” reading of the views of a thinker whose reflections are strongly marked by Reform theology. Possible use of Webster’s thoughts would involve broadening the understanding of the word of God, appreciating the mystery of the Ecclesia, and placing a stronger emphasis on the past dimension of biblical texts.
- Published
- 2023
3. The Jewish Theology of Abraham Joshua Heschel as a Challenge for Catholic Theology
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Stanisłlaw Obirek
- Subjects
Catholic theology ,Judaism ,Philosophy ,Theology ,Religious studies ,Mythical theology - Published
- 2022
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4. Tangible Experiences of Grace: A Qualitative Investigation of Divine Grace in Roman Catholics
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Keith J. Edwards, Peter C. Hill, Hunter B. Harwood, and M. Elizabeth Lewis Hall
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Forgiveness ,Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,Grace ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Religious studies ,Grounded theory ,Article ,Catholic ,Prayer ,Catholic theology ,Spirituality ,Humanity ,Afterlife ,Meditation ,Sociology ,Theology ,Divine grace ,Qualitative ,Applied Psychology ,media_common - Abstract
According to Catholic theology, God offers a gift of love, known as divine grace, to all of humanity. This gift of divine grace is the gift of redemption and forgiveness of sins from God that is offered to everyone who decides to acknowledge and accept it. Grace is central to the lived experience of many Christians. This qualitative study examined how Catholics perceive and experience divine grace using interviews that assessed perceptions of divine grace in 29 practicing adult Catholics. A grounded theory analysis resulted in themes indicating that these Catholics view God’s divine grace as a tangible gift that is undeserved though continuously offered. The participants’ experience of God’s grace is not just an abstract theological concept but an embodied aspect of religious life with which believers can interact in many powerful ways. Three characteristics of God’s divine grace (i.e., salvific grace, cooperation through free will, primacy of conscience and the afterlife) and three mechanisms to experiencing God’s grace (i.e., sacraments, prayer and meditation, saints) are presented.
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- 2021
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5. New directions in natural theology
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David Pickering
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Contemporary philosophy ,Feminist theology ,Catholic theology ,Philosophy ,Religious studies ,Gifford Lectures ,Apologetics ,Natural theology - Abstract
This article contrasts natural theology’s vicissitudes in recent centuries with its more promising prospects in contemporary philosophy and theology. It interrogates certain genres of theology regarding their relation to natural theology, focusing on feminist theology, eco-theology, apologetics and the theology of natural law. It concludes with a reflection on the aspects of natural theology that are particularly prominent at present, and asks if the degree of revival currently enjoyed by natural theology may even be the precursor of a greater role in the academy.
- Published
- 2021
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6. Seven Theses on Dogmatics and Patristics in Catholic Theology☆
- Author
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Lewis Ayres
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Philosophy ,Catholic theology ,Religious studies ,Patristics ,Context (language use) ,Historiography ,Dogmatic theology ,Theology ,Order (virtue) - Abstract
These seven theses suggest the centrality of reflection on Patristic theology for the enterprise of dogmatic theology in a Catholic context. Dogmatic theology itself is used here as an alternative to the modern use of “systematic” theology. In order to see why and how Patristic theology should occupy this place, reflection is necessary on the theology of tradition—and the continual authority of Patristic texts for Catholic theologians—and then on the importance of post-Renaissance modes of historiography. These discussions constitute part of a theological reflection on the nature of theology itself. Although the aim of this piece is to discuss the configuration of (Latin) Catholic theology, the questions raised should be of interest to theologians across a broad ecumenical range.
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- 2021
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7. Sexual Science and the Catholic Church: Areas of Common Ground
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Mark A. Levand
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050103 clinical psychology ,030505 public health ,Sexology ,Field (Bourdieu) ,05 social sciences ,Common ground ,Human sexuality ,Developmentally Appropriate Practice ,Sex education ,Education ,03 medical and health sciences ,Catholic theology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Religious studies ,0305 other medical science - Abstract
The fields of sexuality and Catholic theology are often seen in the public eye as polar opposites—and not from an unfounded base. While there are many topics the Catholic church and the field of se...
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- 2021
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8. The Being and Truth of Jesus Christ: On the Relationship between Ontology and Christology Following Klaus Hemmerle
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Eduard Fiedler
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Argument ,Philosophy ,Catholic theology ,Mediation ,Christology ,Religious studies ,Ontology ,Metaphysics ,Theology ,Relation (history of concept) ,Philosophical methodology - Abstract
In this paper, discussing the way metaphysics and Christology relate to each other, we will attempt to shed the light on the problem of the ontological mediation of the "whole truth" of Jesus Christ. Our argument will be developed in dialogue with selected Christological proposals of German-speaking Catholic theology of the second half of the twentieth century (Rahner, Balthasar, Kasper, Hunermann) and, above all, with Trinitarian-ontological and Trinitarian-Christological approach of Klaus Hemmerle (1929–1994). Hemmerle’s most well-known essay "Theses for a Trinitarian Ontology" (Thesen zu einer trinitarischen Ontologie) deals with the problem of new genuinely Christian Trinitarian ontology. This simultaneously theological and philosophical approach could help us articulate the "whole truth" of Jesus Christ in a new, convincing manner. In conclusion, following Hemmerle, we will suggest where Christology becomes absolutely indispensable in relation to ontology.
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- 2020
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9. Can We Hear Him Now? James Cone’s Enduring Challenge to White Theologians
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Karen Teel
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White supremacy ,White (horse) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Catholic theology ,Philosophy ,Religious studies ,Theology ,Racism ,Cone (formal languages) ,media_common - Abstract
The late great James Hal Cone (1938–2018) challenged white Christians to confront the sin of white supremacy. This article contends that white Catholic theologians collectively have yet to accept Cone’s righteous challenge. A scrutiny of the programming of the annual meetings of the Catholic Theological Society of America and publications in Theological Studies provides the evidence. Having made the case that white US Catholic theologians have not adequately processed Cone’s challenge, the article argues that an important reason for this failure is fear and proposes specific, concrete action steps for professional societies and scholars.
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- 2020
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10. Masaryk's Relationship to the Regular Free Masons
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Ctirad Václav Pospíšil
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Czech ,History ,Presumption ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Religious studies ,language.human_language ,Democracy ,Catholic theology ,language ,Superstition ,Conscience ,Classics ,media_common ,Theme (narrative) - Abstract
This theme is processed by Catholic theologian because the question of Free Masons is connected in the Catholic world frequently with a false presumption, a superstition, that Regular Free Masons are Satanists. Combating superstition is indeed the task of a theologian. In the first and preparative part of this study, the author presents the most important facts from the history of Regular Free Masons in the world and in Czech history. In the second and scientific contributive part, the author analyses the Masaryk’s texts which are dedicated to the issue of Free Masons in their chronological succession. In the conclusion, the author states, that T. G. Masaryk was never a Free Mason, and clarifies his relationship to this organization as diplomatic respect connected with combat for the liberty of conscience and democracy. The relationship between Catholics and Regular Free Masons should take the form of interreligious or ecumenical dialogues.
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- 2020
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11. Muhammad Reconsidered: A Christian Perspective on Islamic Prophecy
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Axel Marc Oaks Takacs
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Catholic theology ,Philosophy ,Christian theology ,Political Science and International Relations ,Perspective (graphical) ,Religious studies ,Islam ,Theology - Abstract
Anna Bonta Moreland’s Muhammad Reconsidered is an exceptional contribution to the fields of Catholic–Islamic studies, Christian theology of religions, and Catholic theology of post-canonical revela...
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- 2020
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12. Reflection of F. D. E. Schleiermacher’ ideas in I. A. Möhler’s «Unity of the Church»
- Author
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Anna Titova
- Subjects
History ,предание ,шлейермахер ,catholic theology ,католическая теология ,ecclesiology ,единство церкви ,tradition ,романтизм ,протестантская теология ,protestant theology ,невидимая церковь ,экклезиология ,Theology ,f.d.e. schleiermacher ,a. möhler ,христианство ,faith ,Philosophy ,Religious studies ,мёлер ,Religion (General) ,unity of church ,Reflection (mathematics) ,вера ,BL1-50 ,romanticism ,christianity ,invisible church - Abstract
This article deals with the infl uence of F. Schleiermacher’s ideas on Möhler’s ecclesiology (of the time when he was writing the Unity in the Church). In this comparison, most interesting is Christian Faith, the main work on dogmatics by F. Schleiermacher (first edition 1821‒1822). Unfortunately, this work is not translated into Russian and has not been studied in Russia. The bulk of literature and mentions of F. Schleiermacher draw on his earlier work, On religion: Speeches to its cultured despisers (1799). However, Schleiermacher’s views underwent considerable change during the twenty-year period between these works. Despite the fact that the mentions of Schleiermacher are very few in the Unity, it was already Möhler’s contemporaries who criticised him for violating the purity of the Catholic doctrine under the infl uence of Schleiermacher’s philosophy. Certain parallels in their reasong are pointed to by the present-day scholars of Möhler as well. Both theologians belonged to the period of Romanticism, and its ideological content and principles of thinking refl ect in their texts. Beside the shared cultural and historical horizon, they are also brought close to each other by the situation having developed in the Catholic and Protestant theologies of that time, i.e. a certain stance against the receding theology of Enlightenment, appeal to the internal religious experience and necessity to combine it with Christian ecclesiology. The issue of Church comes to be a challenge of that time. Against the background of this context, shared and valued by both of them, the diff erences between them conditioned by their diff erent confessions become more prominent. Virtually all meaningful statements made by Möhler about the Holy Spirit repeat what Schleiermacher said about the Christian common spirit (Gemeingeist). This determines his understanding of Tradition, of the unity of Church and of the Christian faith as a “new life”. This being said, A. Möhler rejects and fi ercely criticises Schleiermacher’s identifi cation of the Holy Spirit with the Christian “common spirit” as pantheism, and also the idea of the invisible Church which allowed Schleiermacher to reject the institutional unity of the historical Church and the defi niteness of Tradition.
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- 2020
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13. 'The Silence of the Dead': Remembering Suicide Victims and Reimagining the Communion of Saints
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Elizabeth L. Antus
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Silence ,Psychoanalysis ,Depression (economics) ,Catholic theology ,Religious studies ,medicine ,Psychology ,Mental illness ,medicine.disease ,Communion of saints ,Solidarity - Abstract
Though the Catholic Church has become more mindful of the role that mental illness, especially depression, often plays in suicide, this greater awareness needs development so that Catholic theology can de-stigmatize suicidal people without normalizing suicide. To this end, the article draws upon recent psychological work on suicide to highlight the deep suffering of suicidal people and to indicate that they are, generally, victims of severe mental illness. Furthermore, attention is drawn to a group who is especially stigmatized: those who have already died by suicide. In response, Johann Baptist Metz’s emphasis on anamnestic solidarity with the dead provides an important corrective to this forgetting. Lastly, this revised understanding of suicide decedents helps Catholics develop the doctrine of the communion of saints for today.
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- 2020
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14. Joseph Ratzinger’s contribution to the interpretation of resurrection belief: The Nicholas Copernicus of Catholic theology
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Onazi, Andrew O. and van Wyk, Tanya
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Joseph Ratzinger ,hermeneutic ,Christology ,church ,Religious studies ,tradition ,Catholic theology ,history ,Jesus Christ - Abstract
In this contribution, it is argued that Joseph Ratzinger had a profound influence on the Christology and specifically resurrection belief of the Catholic Church. This is evident in the way Ratzinger approached the challenge and relevance of Jesus' question, 'But who do you say that I am?' For Ratzinger, the reality of the incarnatory event means that the Christian faith is about a person, and thus, it is historical as well. In this sense, history for Ratzinger becomes more than just a succession of human events. It also includes God's act in history. Jesus Christ manifested God concretely. In the same light, for Ratzinger, the Church concretely manifested Jesus Christ. Hence, for Ratzinger, thinking with the Church is essential for a proper exegesis or hermeneutics. Because of that, tradition and Scripture are essential to Ratzinger's Christological thought. In the teachings of the Church fathers and the lives of the saints, he finds a concrete manifestation of Jesus' teaching as contained in the New Testament. Thus, his spiritual Christology results from his meditation on the fathers, saints and some contemporary theologians that makes Ratzinger's Christological thought to be both ancient and new. This contribution highlights a Christological approach that values the historical and brings it into conversation with the theological. INTRADISCIPLINARY AND/OR INTERDISCIPLINARY IMPLICATIONS: This research represents intradisciplinary work within the field of Christian Theology, connecting aspects of Catholic Theology to hermeneutical methodology and what is known as a Christology 'from above'. It connects a historical and theological perspective within systematic theology to highlight the ways in which the Pope and theologian Joseph Ratzinger influenced resurrection belief within the Catholic Church.
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- 2022
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15. The Oxford Handbook of Catholic Theology. Edited by Lewis Ayres and Medi Ann Volpe. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019. xxxiii + 962 pages. $145.00
- Author
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Paul J. Schutz
- Subjects
Catholic theology ,Philosophy ,Religious studies ,Theology ,Education - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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16. Old Catholic Theology: An Introduction, written by Peter-Ben Smit, (2019)
- Author
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John Hind
- Subjects
History of religions ,Catholic theology ,Philosophy ,Religious studies ,Systematic theology - Published
- 2020
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17. Bart J. Koet
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Hans Raun Iversen
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biology ,Catholic theology ,Philosophy ,Religious studies ,Brill ,Theology ,biology.organism_classification - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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18. The Oxford Handbook of Catholic Theology. Edited by Lewis Ayres and Medi Ann Volpe
- Author
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Joseph S. O'Leary
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Philosophy ,Catholic theology ,Religious studies ,Theology - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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19. The analogia fidei in Catholic Theology
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Thomas Joseph White
- Subjects
Catholic theology ,Philosophy ,Religious studies ,Theology - Published
- 2020
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20. Catholic Theology after Kierkegaard. By Joshua Furnal
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John R. Betz
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Philosophy ,Catholic theology ,Religious studies ,Theology - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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21. Paradox and Paul: Catholic and Protestant Theologies of Grace
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Karen Kilby
- Subjects
Protestantism ,Catholic theology ,Philosophy ,Religious studies ,Theology ,Relation (history of concept) - Abstract
John Barclay offers a capacious and helpful framework for reflection on large swathes of the history of the theology of grace with his notion of the six ways of ‘perfecting the gift’. In this article, I extend his analysis to a consideration of certain typical differences between Catholic and Protestant conceptions of grace. Where Protestant theology tends toward a juxtaposition of grace with sin, Catholic theology often considers grace in relation to nature, and each side, I suggest, has its own characteristic proclivity towards paradox.
- Published
- 2020
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22. 'Faustina Kowalska - Doctor of the Church?': About Some Trends in Modern Roman Catholic Theology in Poland
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Tatiana Alexandrovna Folieva
- Subjects
History ,Catholic theology ,Religious studies - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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23. Old Catholic Theology: An Introduction
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Peter-Ben Smit
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Catholic theology ,General Medicine ,Sociology ,Religious studies - Abstract
Old Catholic theology is the theology that is characteristic of the Old Catholic Churches of the Union of Utrecht. Old Catholic Theology: An Introduction, authored by Peter-Ben Smit, an acknowledged expert in the field, outlines the main characteristics of and influences on Old Catholic theology, as well as the extant ecumenical relationships of the Old Catholic Churches. In doing so, it covers what may be called ‘mainstream’ Old Catholic theology, while paying attention to extant diversity within the Old Catholic tradition. Particular attention is given to the hermeneutical approach to theology, ecclesiology, sacramental theology and ecumenical theology. Old Catholic theology has come to be characterized by a sacramental understanding of the church. This is the result of ecumenical dialogue and the basis upon which the Old Catholic Churches engage in ecumenical rapprochement. Hermeneutics of Scripture and tradition plays an important role as well, given that Old Catholic Churches have developed their own form of a hermeneutics of communion.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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24. The Revue La Civiltà Cattolica and Evolutionary Origin - Creation of Man (1850-1980)
- Author
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Ctirad Václav Pospíšil
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Czech ,History ,business.industry ,Religious studies ,Opposition (politics) ,language.human_language ,Old Testament ,German ,Publishing ,Catholic theology ,language ,Darwinism ,Exegesis ,business - Abstract
The study maps the attitudes of Italian Catholic theologians publishing in the prestigious journal La Civilta Cattolica on the issue of the evolutionary origin of the human body from 1850–1980. The strict rejection of the so-called Mivart‘s thesis lasted up to the beginning of the 1940s when things began to change gradually. It is noteworthy that German and Italian Jesuits used different strategies. The former approached Mivart‘s thesis in an increasingly liberal way as of the 1890s, while the latter remained in opposition up until the 1940s. Czech Catholic theology followed the German more closely, rather than the official Italian pattern.
- Published
- 2019
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25. Benjamin Dahlke: New Directions for Catholic Theology. Bernard Lonergan’s Move beyond Neo-Scholasticism
- Author
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Benjamin Dahlke
- Subjects
Philosophy ,History ,Catholic theology ,Religious studies ,Theology ,Neo-Scholasticism - Abstract
Wie andere aufgeschlossene Fachvertreter seiner Generation hat der kanadische Jesuit Bernard Lonergan (1904–1984) dazu beigetragen, die katholische Theologie umfassend zu erneuern. Angesichts der offenkundigen Grenzen der Neuscholastik, die sich im Laufe des 19. Jahrhunderts als das Modell durchgesetzt hatte, suchte er schon früh nach einer Alternative. Bei aller Skepsis gegenüber dem herrschenden Thomismus schätzte er Thomas von Aquin in hohem Maß. Das betraf insbesondere dessen Bemühen, die damals aktuellen wissenschaftlichen und methodischen Erkenntnisse einzubeziehen. Lonergan wollte dies ebenso tun. Es ging ihm darum, der katholischen Theologie eine neue Richtung zu geben, also von der Neuscholastik abzurücken. Denn diese berücksichtigte weder das erkennende Subjekt noch das zu erkennende Objekt hinreichend.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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26. Akapwa‐infused paradigm in teaching Catholic theology/catechesis in a multireligious classroom in the Philippines
- Author
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Willard Enrique R Macaraan
- Subjects
Cultural influence ,Catechesis ,Catholic theology ,Teaching method ,Religious education ,Religious studies ,Self-concept ,Sociology ,Traditional knowledge ,Christianity ,Education - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Revisiting the Mystery of Life in the Hereafter: Reflections of Fr Augustine Urayai of Zimbabwe
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Sekgothe Mokgoatšana and Misheck Mudyiwa
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History ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Forestry ,Plant Science ,Immortality ,Catholic theology ,Exorcist ,Christian anthropology ,Heaven ,Afterlife ,Religious studies ,Liminality ,Soul ,media_common - Abstract
The quest for knowledge regarding life after death is indispensable and paramount to most cultures and religions, including African spiritualties and mystery cults. Fr Augustine Urayai was a Roman Catholic priest and exorcist and this paper critically examines his theological reflections on death and life after death, particularly his idea of the “liminal/transitional phase” in the upward movement of spirits from earth to heaven for restoration and re-unification with God. The compulsory “liminal phase” or “zones” (magedhe) where all spirits pass through before their fate is ascertained comprises the resting, treatment, judgment, and feasting respectively. The article first examines the milieu in which Fr Urayai’s theology emerged and developed. As a way of analysis, it explores the age-old question of the immortality of the soul and its link with other religions, cultural and philosophical traditions. As it probes deeper, the article critically examines the ramifications and impact of Fr Urayai’s new theology on the Zimbabwe Christian landscape. The main argument developed in this article is that, even though Fr Urayai’s theory of life in the hereafter appears to be a breakaway from celebrated mainstream theological formulations, it has the potential to hatch useful insights into possible new areas of theological reflection in the ongoing discourses on the link between Christian anthropology and different African spiritualties.
- Published
- 2021
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28. Human rationality in Vito Mancuso’s liberal Catholic theology augmenting the notions of Van Huyssteen’s ‘postfoundational transversality’ and McGrath’s ‘rational consilience’
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Johan Buitendag and Corneliu Cristian Simut
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wentzel van huyssteen ,post-foundational transversality ,Transversality ,Philosophy ,Religious studies ,Rationality ,rational consilience ,human rationality ,Religion (General) ,Catholic theology ,theology and science dialogue ,alister mcgrath ,BL1-50 ,vito mancuso ,Theology ,Consilience - Abstract
The cue for this article is human rationality being the cornerstone in Wentzel van Huyssteen’s thinking, and Alister McGrath’s scepsis about the feasibility of a postfoundational transversality in particular. This article does not intend to juxtapose Van Huyssteen’s postfoundational rationality to McGrath’s enterprise of a ‘rational consilience’ but contends that a transversal approach to rationality engages social ramifications as well. Subsequently, a liberal Catholic theologian’s take on rationality is presented here as such an offering from the social sciences contributes to a bricolage of unintegrated pieces of knowledge and discernments emerging from various disciplinary or social viewpoints on reality. Vito Mancuso continues to focus on human rationality which, in his view, provides humanity with the hope of eternal life or life from the perspective of eternity. Such a conviction is in line with his horizontal understanding of human rationality, in addition to the human being’s first challenge to understanding reality. Intradisciplinary and/or interdisciplinary implications: The reason d’être of this article is to call for a discussion partner to the notion of human rationality from the social sciences (indicated as one of the neglected fields in the theology and science discourse). Vito Mancuso, for one, brings the pragmatic and transformative (even revolutionary) dimension to the table. A transversal approach to rationality must integrate such social practices as well.
- Published
- 2021
29. 12. Beyond Ethnic and National Imagination: Toward a Catholic Theology of U.S. Immigration
- Author
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Gioacchino Campese
- Subjects
Catholic theology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Immigration ,Ethnic group ,Sociology ,Religious studies ,media_common - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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30. The Birth of American Catholic Theology
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SJ Roger Haight
- Subjects
Scholasticism ,Catholic theology ,Philosophy ,Religious studies ,History of theology ,Theology ,Witness - Abstract
The eighty years of Theological Studies bear witness to the birth of American Catholic theology. This article traces that development through five stages. During its first two decades scholasticism reigned and authority was watchful. Vatican II then introduced a period of change, followed by a thirty-five-year creative phase in which a modern consciousness discussed new issues. By the final period corresponding to Francis’s papacy, an American Catholic theology was in place.
- Published
- 2019
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31. Henri de Lubac’s turn to the church
- Author
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Sjoerd Mulder
- Subjects
Action (philosophy) ,Catholic theology ,Philosophy ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Eucharist ,Religious studies ,Conviction ,Doctrine ,Meaning (existential) ,Theology ,Christianity ,Ecclesiology ,media_common - Abstract
In the last thirty years, theologians such as Milbank and Hauerwas have allowed ecclesiology to play a fundamental role in theology. This move is grounded in their conviction that the meaning of Christianity consists primarily not in its theory and doctrine but in its lived form, which is the church. Interestingly, this contemporary 'turn to the church' in many ways resembles an earlier revival of ecclesiology in the beginning of the twentieth century in Roman Catholic theology. In this paper, I will focus on the work of Henri de Lubac, and demonstrate how the particular way in which he develops his idea of the church might offer valuable insights for contemporary theology. First, I sketch how his particular understanding of the church as the social and historical embodiment of God's gracious action immediately implied an embrace of the social and historical world. Second, I argue that notwithstanding all his emphasis on the church, his particular understanding of the church as springing from the Eucharist means that the church is never idolized but always points beyond itself to God. I conclude by relating these insights to the contemporary turn to the church.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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32. Is the Church Defenseless Against Sociocultural Changes? Which Moral Theology Provides the Response to this Modern Challenge? A reflection on Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI’s Essay 'The Church and the Scandal of Sexual Abuse'
- Author
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Tadeusz Zadykowicz
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,education.educational_degree ,Context (language use) ,General Medicine ,Morality ,Habilitation ,Sexual revolution ,Sexual abuse ,Catholic theology ,Sociology ,Religious studies ,Sociocultural evolution ,education ,media_common ,Primary research - Abstract
REV. TADEUSZ ZADYKOWICZ – was born in 1968 and graduated from the Major Seminary of the Archdiocese of Bialystok and the Catholic University of Lublin (KUL). He obtained his Habilitation of Theological Sciences degree with a specialization in Moral Theology. Since 2001, he has conducted research and teaches at KUL’s Institute of Moral Theology. He is currently a professor in the Department of Fundamental Moral Theology and serves as the Director of the Institute of Moral Theology. Rev. Zadykowicz belongs to the following academic societies: the Scientific Society of KUL (2002-), the Society for Moral Theology (1999-), the Scientific Society of Lublin (2003-), the European Society for Catholic Theology (2004-), and the Francis de Sales Scientific Society (2008-). His primary research interests include: the morality of religious life; the contemporary context of religious and moral life; the biblical and cultural premises of morality; the role of personal examples in the Christian moral life; the morality of researchers and conducting research.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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33. A Spanish demonologist during the French Wars of Religion
- Author
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Fabián Alejandro Campagne
- Subjects
History ,Grammar ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Catholic theology ,Rhetoric ,Demonology ,Religious studies ,Fanaticism ,Period (music) ,media_common - Abstract
During one of the most violent phases of the French Wars of Religion (1562-1598), the Spanish Jesuit Juan Maldonado made an extraordinarily original contribution to early-modern demonology. This contribution did not originally take on a printed form: rather it started life as a theological course taught at one of the most prestigious and innovative Parisian educational institutions of the period. Between 1551 and 1557 Maldonado studied grammar, Greek, logic, rhetoric and philosophy in Salamanca. Even more recent historians have, for the most part ignored him and have continued to underestimate his significance both for his contribution to Catholic theology and demonology, and for his role in the Wars of Religion. The lectures dedicated to impure spirits also show a trace of bitterness which reflected the anti-Protestant fanaticism of the author, disappointed by the outcome of the Third War of Religion (1568-1570), which made considerable concessions to French Protestants.
- Published
- 2020
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34. New theology of the priesthood or theological anticlericalism
- Author
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Aleksei Chernyi
- Subjects
History ,priest ,lcsh:BL1-50 ,Philosophy ,ecclesiology ,Religious studies ,lcsh:Religion (General) ,Catholic theology ,anticlericalism ,Second Vatican Council ,clericalization ,Hans Küng ,Theology - Abstract
After the Second Vatican Council, priesthood came to be one of the key themes in Catholic theology of the latter half of the 20th century. This article attempts to scrutinise the specifi c rhetoric that was generated around the topic of priesthood and became wide-spread in various spheres of theological studies. With Hans Kueng’s ideas as an example, the author of this article reconstructs, fi rstly, the main theses of the “new theology of priesthood” and, secondly, the argumentation underlying them. The conclusion is that with the crisis of priesthood in the background, not only there appears the criticism of the “traditional” priest, there develops a positive theological programme which aims, on the one hand, at the return to the tradition and Christian roots and, on the other hand, aims at the compatibility with the facts of life of the present-day world. At the same time, the rhetoric in question contains as its important part trenchant criticism of not solely the traditional theology of ecclesiastical ministry, but also of established practices of pastoral service and of parish life. This criticism is aimed at the accelerated renewal of the Catholic church life and the overcoming of the crisis of the traditional religious institutes. Conservative authors regard these attempts as “theologians’ subversions” and as the work aimed at aggravating the crisis. Following the analysis carried out in the article, this phenomenon in Catholic theology is termed “theological anticlericalism”.
- Published
- 2018
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- View/download PDF
35. 'Was It Good for You?': Recasting Catholic Sexual Ethics in Light of Women’s Sexual Pain Disorders
- Author
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Elizabeth Lawrence Antus
- Subjects
060303 religions & theology ,050903 gender studies ,Feminist theology ,Catholic theology ,05 social sciences ,Religious studies ,Gender studies ,Human sexuality ,06 humanities and the arts ,0509 other social sciences ,0603 philosophy, ethics and religion ,Sexual ethics ,Psychology - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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36. Carlo Passaglia’s De Ecclesia Christi: A Trinitarian Ecclesiology at the Heart of the 19th Century
- Author
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Valfredo Maria Rossi
- Subjects
060104 history ,Position (obstetrics) ,Philosophy ,Catholic theology ,Religious studies ,0601 history and archaeology ,06 humanities and the arts ,Theology ,Ecclesiology - Abstract
The purpose of this article is to explore an aspect of the Catholic theology of the 19th century which is relatively unknown: namely the Roman School and Carlo Passaglia’s position within it. This contribution is focused on presenting the main theological treatise of Carlo Passaglia (1812–87), De Ecclesia Christi (1853–56), an unprecedented work in the context of 19th-century theology, from which a Trinitarian ecclesiology, rooted in the economy of salvation, emerges. The article will be divided into three parts: the first will provide a brief outline of the Roman School, which played a significant role in the theology of the 19th century; the second will offer a biography of Passaglia; finally, the third will focus on the De Ecclesia and will present a basic survey of the whole monograph in order to highlight the most significant aspects of Passaglia’s ecclesiology. Moreover, this contribution will seek to emphasize that several aspects of Passaglia’s Trinitarian ecclesiology went on to be developed by the Second Vatican Council, particularly in Lumen Gentium.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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37. Dissenting Church: New Models for Conflict and Diversity in the Roman Catholic Tradition
- Author
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Bradford E. Hinze
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,Religious studies ,Magisterium ,Education ,Epistemology ,Power (social and political) ,Dissenting opinion ,Catholic theology ,Cultural studies ,Polyphony ,Dissent ,Sociology ,Ecclesiology ,media_common - Abstract
The concept of “dissent” is of recent coinage and narrow use in Catholic theology. However, since rereadings of Catholic tradition through the lens of cultural studies have revealed its constitutive plurality, we are faced with a profound tension between a critical description of ecclesial polyphony and the normative ideals of unity and consensus. This interdisciplinary reappraisal of tradition raises far-reaching theological questions: Do we necessarily have to refer to inner-ecclesial polyphony as “dissent”? Does “dissent” silently rely on (and thus reinforce) established hierarchies of authority in the church? What could be counterhegemonic frameworks that resist entrenched power/knowledge regimes in the church? In which ways could “dissent” be reconceived to allow for a constructive approach to inner-ecclesial plurality? Once we raise questions such as these, we begin to see that Catholic theology lacks adequate models for a reflection of ecclesial polyphony in its full complexity. This roundtable addresses this lacuna: it offers critical case studies of historical and contemporary forms of “dissent” within the church, and it engages the theological and ecclesiological issues at stake.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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38. Vocational Freedom, Parental Authority and Pastoral Persuasion in Seventeenth-Century France
- Author
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Christopher J. Lane
- Subjects
History ,Persuasion ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Religious studies ,06 humanities and the arts ,060202 literary studies ,060104 history ,Individualism ,Negotiation ,Canon law ,State (polity) ,Vocational education ,Catholic theology ,Political science ,Law ,0602 languages and literature ,0601 history and archaeology ,media_common - Abstract
In seventeenth-century France, secular law favoured parents’ authority in children's choices of marriage, religion or the clerical state, despite Catholic theology and canon law favouring individual freedom. Negotiating this tension led many clerical writers – in advice on choosing a state of life found in devotional treatises, sermons and catechisms – to reconcile parental involvement with vocational liberty. Believing that the right choice of a state was virtually necessary for salvation, they urged parents and children to cooperate in discerning and accepting God's call. Amid conflicts with French law and culture, pastoral persuasion helped to forge an enduringly influential strain in modern Catholicism.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The Criteria of 'Authentically' Catholic Theology: Reading Theology Today a Decade Later
- Author
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Ethna Regan
- Subjects
dialogue ,Norm (philosophy) ,Religions. Mythology. Rationalism ,dissent ,magisterium ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Religious studies ,Context (language use) ,Catholic theology ,BL1-2790 ,Witness ,Magisterium ,Faith ,Sociology ,Dissent ,Theology ,Pope Francis ,theological diversity ,Ecclesiology ,media_common - Abstract
In light of the fecundity and diversity of Catholic theology since Vatican II, a 2012 report of the International Theological Commission (ITC) identified perspectives, principles, and criteria—distinctive family traits—of Catholic theology, what Pope Benedict XVI called its “genetic code”: primacy of the Word of God; the faith of the Church as its source, context, and norm; the science of faith; drawing constantly on the canonical witness of Scripture; fidelity to the Apostolic Tradition; attention to the sensus fidelium; responsible adherence to the ecclesiastical magisterium; practiced in collaboration with the whole company of theologians; in dialogue with the world; giving a scientifically and rationally argued presentation of the Christian faith; integration of plurality in the intellectus fidei; and sapiential. This article marks the 10th anniversary of the ITC report by offering a critical commentary on the criteria, examining the possibilities, limitations, and tensions inherent in each, and the ongoing relevance of these criteria for contemporary Catholic theology. It argues that although the aim of the ITC report is not to promote uniformity but to avoid fragmentation, and its framework is an ecclesiology of communion, when the interpretative possibilities of theology are discussed, the report tends to retreat from these possibilities and adopt a restrictive emphasis on conformity. The article then examines what Pope Francis (2013–) says about the characteristics of Catholic theology and the role of theologians in his major documents and his addresses to faculties of theology. It argues that Francis makes a distinctive contribution to consideration of what is “authentically” Catholic theology, and may offer a less restrictive understanding of such theology for the diverse academic, cultural, and ecclesial contexts in which Catholic theologians find themselves.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Superiority without Supersessionism: Walter Kasper, The Gifts and the Calling of God Are Irrevocable, and God’s Covenant with the Jews
- Author
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Adam Gregerman
- Subjects
Value (ethics) ,Supersessionism ,New Covenant ,Philosophy ,Catholic theology ,Religious studies ,Theology ,Covenant ,Hebrew Bible - Abstract
Nostra Aetate initiated a revolutionary shift in Catholic theology, opposing supersessionism and affirming that Jews remain in a salvific covenantal relationship with God. However, this shift raises for Catholics a deep tension regarding the value of this “Old Covenant” vis-à-vis the “New Covenant,” as this article illustrates using the statements of Walter Kasper and The Gifts and the Calling of God Are Irrevocable. While speaking positively about the Old Covenant, both deem it essential to maintain the superiority of the New Covenant as universalistic, fulfilling the promises in the Old Covenant and transcending its limitations. The author demonstrates how they seek to reduce this tension by characterizing the two covenants as good and better covenants, rather than as bad and good covenants, thereby avoiding a lapse into supersessionism.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The Category of Testimony as an Axis of Fundamental Ecclesiology: The Credibility of the Church in the Work of Salvador Pié-Ninot
- Author
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David Bouma
- Subjects
lcsh:Christianity ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Personal relationship ,Catholic Theology ,Religious studies ,Salvador Pié-Ninot (1941) ,Personal life ,Gospel ,Christianity ,Revelation ,Fundamental Theology ,Ecclesiology ,Faith ,lcsh:BR1-1725 ,New Via Empirica ,Credibility ,Sociology ,Theology ,media_common - Abstract
The article presents the fundamental ecclesiology of the contemporary Catholic theologian Salvador Pie-Ninot (*1941). The text shows the way in which he solves the question of the credibility of the Church and the attitudes of private Christianity with its negative attitude towards the Church (believing without belonging). Pie-Ninot underlines that the credibility of the Church is dependent on revelation and that the character of faith is ecclesial. He interconnects the last two councils: the concept of the Church, whose divine character is approachable by man (via empirica, the way of experience) as it is taught by the First Vatican Council, with the ecclesial stances of the Second Vatican Council, which reduces the emphasis on the attributes of the Church in favour of revelation, the person of Jesus Christ and a personal relationship to him. Pie-Ninot then offers the way of testimony, which includes the outer (for example, apostolic tradition) and inner form of churchly reality (personal life according to the demands of the Gospel) and perceives the Church as a privileged space of God’s revelation and salvation.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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42. Studium Teologii Prawosławnej Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego i jego 'teologiczni spadkobiercy'
- Author
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Doroteusz Sawicki and Andrzej Baczyński
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,World War II ,Homeland ,historia ,The Republic ,Independence ,Politics ,Spanish Civil War ,teologia prawosławna ,Catholic theology ,Political science ,lcsh:B ,Iconography ,Religious studies ,lcsh:Philosophy. Psychology. Religion ,Uniwersytet Warszawski ,media_common - Abstract
In 1918, after the 120 years of occupation by three neighbouring powers, Austria, Prussia and Russia, Poland obtained its desired independence and returned on the map of Europe. Warsaw became the capital of the Republic once again. One of the authorities’ first moves was to resume the activities of the University of Warsaw that were disrupted by the war. We needed qualified staff who would rebuild the country. This concerned politics, administration, culture…, and the religious life of our homeland. For this purpose, the Faculty of Catholic Theology was established (1918), Faculty of Lutheran Theology (1922), and in 1925, the Faculty of Orthodox Studies was also opened. Throughout the 14 years of its existence up to the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939, the Faculty of Orthodox Studies faithfully fulfilled its mission of serving the Church, education and the homeland. It educated priests and theologians dedicated to the church and citizens committed to their homeland. Unfortunately, the process of building today’s well organized and extensive structure of higher (and secondary) Orthodox theological schooling in Poland was neither simple nor short lived. After the war, when the University of Warsaw refused the Faculty of Orthodox Studies the right to further operate, it turned into the Faculty of Orthodox Theology at the Christian Theological Academy to continue serving God, the Church and education. The Orthodox Theological Seminary in Warsaw experienced many changes and processes after the war in order to obtain its current shape and level. The Department of Orthodox Theology at the University of Bialystok was established in 1999. It is a continuation and expansion of the theological education at the University of Warsaw. The Faculty of Orthodox Studies at the University of Warsaw, the Christian Theological Academy, the Orthodox Theological Seminary and the Department of Orthodox Theology at the University of Bialystok, along with post-secondary studies in iconography and hymnography, as related academic and didactic units, have performed and still performs their tasks in serving education and the Orthodox Church. By mutually taking advantage of this experience (it should rather be said that taking advantage of the Faculty of Orthodox Studies at the University of Warsaw after the war), they fulfilled their expectations despite difficult times and unfavourable politics. They form a constantly developing spiritual and cultural common heritage of the Republic.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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43. John Baptist Göttsberger (1868-1958), a Witness to Profound Changes of the Attitude in Catholic Theology to the Theory of the Evolutionary Origin of Man
- Author
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Ctirad Václav Pospíšil
- Subjects
German ,Old Testament ,Human spirit ,Philosophy ,Catholic theology ,Religious studies ,Openness to experience ,language ,Darwinism ,History of theology ,Theology ,Exegesis ,language.human_language - Abstract
This paper is part of a larger scholar project focused on Catholic theologians and scientists between 1871 and 1910 who accepted the evolutionary origin of the human body in accordance with so-called Mivart’s theory, or rejected it. The author presents the life and work of an important German Biblical scholar Johann Baptist Gottsberger (1868–1958), focusing mainly on his 1910 book Adam und Eva. Gottsberger describes the contemporary scene very well providing information about an entire range of authors who showed a great openness to the evolutionary origin of man. Surprisingly we encounter here for the first time authors who hypothesised the possibility of also applying the evolutionary model to creation – the origin of the human spirit, what is also true in some sense about Gottsberger himself. It turns out that at least in German Catholic theology, the year 1910 is a turning point, because after this date authors showing an openness to the evolutionary theory of the origin of man cannot be considered pioneers. These authors formed a numerous and still growing group.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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44. Reception of Analogy of Being in Contemporary Eastern Orthodox Theology
- Author
-
Oleg Davydov
- Subjects
Conceptualization ,Philosophy ,Catholic theology ,Religious studies ,Ontology ,Analogy ,Metaphysics ,Theology ,Eastern Orthodox - Abstract
This article examines the relationship between the analogy of being (which is a fundamental principle of Catholic theology and metaphysics) and the most significant contemporary Eastern Orthodox theologians. This question of analogy touches upon the fundamental theological problem of the conceptualization of the relationship between God and creation. Even though there is no analogy in Eastern Orthodox theology, it has two polar positions regarding Western analogy of being—pro and con.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Joseph Knabenbauer SJ (1839–1911) a otázka evolučního vzniku člověka
- Author
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Ctirad Václav Pospíšil
- Subjects
Czech ,Theology of Creation ,lcsh:Christianity ,Evolution ,Philosophy ,Religious studies ,Book of Genesis ,History of theology ,Human body ,language.human_language ,Epistemology ,Old Testament ,lcsh:BR1-1725 ,Catholic theology ,Allusion ,Origin of Man ,Darwinism ,language ,History of Theology ,Exegesis ,Biblical Exegesis - Abstract
The paper is a part of the research that focuses on the Catholic theologians and biologists between 1871 and 1910 who accepted Mivart’s thesis of the evolutionary origin of the human body, or who, on the contrary, tended to reject it. The paper presents J. Knabenbauer SJ (1839–1911). In the 1930s, Czech theologian J. Miklik asserted that Knabenauer accepted Mivart’s position. Knabenbauer’s study on evolution is analysed. Already in 1877, Knabenbauer shows, in the first two parts of his work, an openness to the reality of evolutionary origin of species in the fauna and flora. In the third part, he deals with Mivart’s thesis. From the philosophical point of view, Knabenbauer admits the possibility of the creation of human body by way of evolution. From the exegetical point of view, he refuses the reading of Gen 2:7 that considered this verse to be an allusion of the origin of the human body from the animal base. Because of this later view, Miklik’s information is to be considered imprecise. Knnabenbauer’s study contains, though, much relevant information that testifies to the Catholic theology and exegesis of his era.
- Published
- 2017
46. Putting the Protest Back into Protestant
- Author
-
Christine Helmer
- Subjects
Power (social and political) ,Scholarship ,Religious intolerance ,Protestantism ,Excellence ,Catholic theology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Law ,Religious studies ,Sociology ,Legend ,Economic Justice ,media_common - Abstract
When Martin Luther nailed his 95 Theses to the door of the Wittenberg Castle Church on 31 October 1517, he did so in protest at abuses in Catholic theology and practice. Contemporary times, too, call for protest. The first “protest” concerns the revitalization of education and an increased commitment to intellectual excellence. The second “protest” concerns a recovery of Luther as a figure of protest. While scholars have tamed Luther's dangerous doctrines, the popular imagination still perceives him as an urban legend who spoke truth to power. An expansive notion of scholarship on Luther is required in order to approach a Luther who continues to inspire people around the world. The third “protest” is a critical protest of Luther's religious intolerance, specifically his anti-Judaism. Christian theologians must acknowledge Luther's anti-Judaism as central to his theology and radically revise this legacy to promote justice in inter-religious relations.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. WAWASAN KEBANGSAAN DALAM PUSARAN IMAN KATOLIK (Refleksi Nilai Ajaran Katolik terhadap Keutuhan NKRI Studi di Kota Kupang)
- Author
-
Raudlatul Ulum
- Subjects
Dignity ,State (polity) ,Political science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Catholic theology ,National identity ,Acknowledgement ,Religious freedom ,Religious studies ,The Republic ,Nationalism ,media_common - Abstract
Catholics in Indonesia perceive that the Republic of Indonesia is founded by many elements of religious entity. The strength of the state completely lies on the agreement of many adherents of religion to unite as an independent country. The spirit of nationalism is the acknowledgement of all people who are equally important to enhance the dignity of Indonesia. The research on Catholics in Kupang is aimed at understanding the relationship of Catholic theology and nationalism in socio-political practices and current realities of the adherents, especially the religious elites, public figures, Catholics in general, and youth. Based on the result of the research, it is highly recommended that the formulation of national identity and guarantee of the religious freedom is important. It is equally important to strengthen the nationalism by enhancing the understanding of Catholic theology.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The Female Body in Catholic Theology: Menstruation, Reproduction, and Autonomy
- Author
-
Doris M. Kieser
- Subjects
Scrutiny ,Judaism ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Religious studies ,Subject (philosophy) ,Human sexuality ,Gender studies ,Education ,Menstruation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Self-determination ,030225 pediatrics ,Catholic theology ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Psychology ,Autonomy ,media_common - Abstract
Female bodies as sexual and reproductive are subject to much scrutiny in Western societies and the church. Mysteriously missing from discourses related to such scrutiny is the reality of menstruation and its place in theology and females’ lives. From within a feminist theological perspective, this article aims to recover menstruation and menstrual awareness, and to advocate for the positive possibilities of widespread recognition and acceptance of, and engagement with, these realities to advance female presence in sexual theology and related discourses. In engaging contemporary social discussions, Jewish and Christian histories of menstruation, contemporary sexual theologies, and varied feminist theologies, this article proposes a robust view of menstruation in the sexual lives of faithful females.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. John Webster and Catholic Theology
- Author
-
Fergus Kerr
- Subjects
Philosophy ,Catholic theology ,Sacred theology ,Theology ,Religious studies - Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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50. Holiness in the Making
- Author
-
Stephan van Erp
- Subjects
David Jones ,media_common.quotation_subject ,sacrament ,Religious studies ,Sign (semiotics) ,labor ,Social criticism ,Catholic social teaching ,rerum novarum ,Sketch ,Marie-Dominique Chenu ,Epistemology ,Faith ,Political theology ,Catholic theology ,Sociology ,Order (virtue) ,media_common - Abstract
In this essay, I will argue that a political theology of human work can provide the sacramental principle underlying the theology of labor. This principle could complement the foundations of Catholic social teaching, since the sacramental aspects of work have not been made very explicit in the ethical framework of the Church's theology of work. The view of labor as the active participation in God's future is an important aspect of such a theology. In order to serve as a foundation for faith-based labor organizing, I will claim that it needs to be complemented by a sacramental view of labor as art, a labor-aesthetic that undergirds a labor-ethic, in which labor itself becomes a sign and instrument of the way the Church becomes God's work in the world. First, I will sketch an outline of some of the major positions on labor in modern Catholic theology. Then, I will draw on the writings of the British poet and painter David Jones to explore a sacramental view of human work, arguing that a sacramental view of work could support the Church's social criticism of laborer's circumstances.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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