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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Christianity > Christian life & practice > Christian sacraments
For most Christians, marriage is considered a sacrament, created
and uniquely blessed by God. Yet, the theology of marriage rarely
matches the actual experience. Marriage is too often a violent,
loveless institution-and it is increasingly delayed, avoided, or
terminated.
Marriage After Modernity offers new hope for Christian marriage
at a time of unprecedented social and theological change. It
provides an unreserved commendation of Christian marriage,
reaffirming its status as a sacrament and institution of mutual
self-giving. At the same time, it breaks new ground. It draws on
earlier traditions of betrothal and informal marriage to accept
some forms of pre-marital cohabitation and provides a new defense
of the link between marriage and procreation by sketching a
theology of liberation for children. Chapters shed new light on
divorce and legitimate theological grounds for 'the parting of the
ways, ' contraception, and the question of whether marriage is a
heterosexual institution. Particular attention is paid throughout
the book to overcoming the androcentric bias of much Christian
thought and the distorting effect it has had on marriage.
Marriage After Modernity argues for a vision of marriage which
does not abandon its history, and which draws upon its premodern
roots to grapple with our current social, cultural, and
intellectual upheavals.
In the tradition of the medieval cycle plays performed for
education, enrichment, and entertainment, A New Corpus Christi:
Plays for Churches presents 25 short plays and skits with one or
two scripts for each of 21 events in the church year. The scripts
range from celebratory pieces to problem plays to liturgical dramas
to plays that call for no worship setting accouterments. The
scripts will also provide discussion starters for Sunday school
classes or small groups. And some of the plays might be grouped
together as programs on particular topics such as poverty and
homelessness or death and dying. This book also provides a resource
for university and seminary courses in liturgics and worship.
A translation that uses traditional English of the marriage service
as celebrated in the Orthodox Church. This consists of three parts:
the betrothal, the crowning, and the removal of the crowns. This
booklet has the texts for all the participants: priest, deacon, and
chanter. It will also allow wedding guests who are unfamiliar with
the service to follow it and will be particularly helpful when the
service is celebrated in a language other than English. It does not
contain any musical settings for the sung parts of the service.
Recalling the Biblical and Patristic roots of the Church's
sacramental identity, the Second Vatican Council calls the Church
the 'visible sacrament' of that unity offered through Christ (LG
9). 'Sacrament' in this sense not only describes who the Church is,
but what she does. In this regard, the Council Fathers were careful
to establish a strong connection between the symbolic nature of the
Church's sacraments and their effect on those who received them.
Reginald Lynch is concerned with the cleansing of the heart-a
phrase borrowed from St. Augustine and employed by Aquinas, which
describes the effects that natural elements such as water or bread
have on the human person when taken up by the Church as sacramental
signs. Aquinas' approach to sacramental efficacy is unique for its
integration of diverse theological topics such as Christology,
merit, grace, creation and instrumentality. While all of these
topics will be considered to some extent, the primary focus of The
Cleansing of the Heart is the sacraments understood as instrumental
causes of grace. This volume provides the historical context for
understanding the development of sacramental causality as a
theological topic in the scholastic period, emphasizing the unique
features of Aquinas' response to this question. Following this,
relevant texts from Aquinas' early and later work are examined,
noting Aquinas' development and integration of the idea of
sacramental causality in his later work. The Cleansing of the Heart
concludes by contrasting alternatives to Aquinas' theory of
sacramental causality that subsequently emerged. The rise of
humanism introduced many changes within rhetoric and philosophy of
language that had a profound effect on some theologians during the
Modern period. This book provides historical context for
understanding the most prominent of these theories in contrast to
Aquinas, and examines some of their theological implications.
Based on a constructive reading of Scripture, the apostolic and
patristic traditions and deeply rooted in the sacramental
experience and spiritual ethos of the Orthodox Church, John
Zizioulas offers a timely anthropological and cosmological
perspective of human beings as "priests of creation" in addressing
the current ecological crisis. Given the critical and urgent
character of the global crisis and by adopting a clear line of
argumentation, Zizioulas describes a vision based on a
compassionate and incarnational conception of the human beings as
liturgical beings, offering creation to God for the life of the
world. He encourages the need for deeper interaction with modern
science, from which theology stands to gain an appreciation of the
interconnection of every aspect of materiality and life with
humankind. The result is an articulate and promising vision that
inspires a new ethos, or way of life, to overcome our alienation
from the rest of creation.
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On the Body of the Lord
(Hardcover)
Albert the Great; Translated by Sr Albert Marie Surmanski
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Albert the Great wrote On the Body of the Lord in the 1270s, making
it his final work of sacramental theology. A companion volume to
his commentary on the Mass, On the Body of the Lord is a
comprehensive discussion of Eucharistic theology. The treatise is
structured around six names for the Eucharist taken from the Mass:
grace, gift, food, communion, sacrifice, and sacrament. It emerges
from the liturgy and is intended to draw the reader back to
worship. The overall movement of the treatise follows the order of
God's wisdom. Albert begins by discussing the Eucharist as a gift
flowing from the goodness of the Trinity. He touches on its
relation to redemption and the Church, including a rigorous
Aristotelian analysis of Eucharistic change and presence before
ending with a discussion of Mass rubrics. The most significant
theological emphasis is on the Eucharist as food given to feed the
people of God. The style varies to suit the content: certain
sections are terse; others are devotional, allowing the reader to
enter the saint's own prayer. Perhaps most characteristically
Albertine is an extended meditation that compares the process of
digestion to the incorporation of the Christian into the Body of
Christ. The mixed style allows this work to integrate rigorous
aspects of scholastic thought with a fervent love for God, making
On the Body of the Lord one of Albert's most human as well as one
of his most beautiful works. On the Body of the Lord was well
received, particularly in areas that came to be influenced by the
devotio moderna. By 1484, three separate Latin editions had been
printed, two of which were the inaugural works on new presses. In
the following century the Protestant Reformation brought an end to
its popularity. On the Body of the Lord is here translated into
English for the first time.
"Pardo's study provides a persuasive criticism of the widespread
assumption that the process of Christianization in Mexico can be
conceived as the imposition of a complete and fool-proof system
that did not accept doubts or compromises. "The Origins of Mexican
Catholicism" will become an invaluable tool for future researchers
and enrich future debates on the subject."
---Fernando Cervantes, Bristol University, UK
"Pardo does an excellent job of balancing and contrasting
sixteenth-century Catholic theology with Nahua thought and belief."
---John F. Schwaller, University of Minnesota
At first glance, religious conversion may appear to be only a
one-way street. When studying sixteenth-century Mexico, one might
assume that colonial coercion was the driving force behind the
religious conversion of the native population. But "The Origins of
Mexican Catholicism" shows how Spanish missionaries instead drew on
existing native ceremonies in order to make Christianity more
accessible to the Nahua population whom they were trying to
convert.
Osvaldo F. Pardo explains that religious figures not only shaped
native thought, but that indigenous rituals had an impact on the
religion itself. This work illustrates the complex negotiations
that took place in the process of making the Christian sacraments
available to the native peoples, and at the same time, forced the
missionaries to reexamine the meaning of their sacraments through
the eyes of an alien culture.
For Spanish missionaries, ritual not only became a focus of
evangelical concern but also opened a window to the social world of
the Nahuas. Missionaries were able to delve into the Nahua's
notions of self, emotions, andsocial and cosmic order. By better
understanding the sociological aspects of Nahua culture, Christians
learned ways to adequately convey their religion through mutual
understanding instead of merely colonial oppression.
Given its interdisciplinary approach, this book will be of interest
to specialists in Latin American intellectual and literary history,
the history of religion, and anthropology, and to anyone interested
in cross-cultural processes.
Baptism is a public sign that a Christian has been brought from
death to life. This volume in the 9Marks Church Questions series
unpacks Scripture's teaching on the necessity of baptism for the
life and growth of the local church body.
Winner of the 2022 Nautilus Book Award in Religion / Spirituality
of Western Thought (#24B) Mark Clavier examines a series of
paradoxes that lie at the heart of Christian faith: eternity and
time, silence and words, and wonder and the commonplace. In an
intellectual reflection on an overnight trek on Cadair Idris in
Wales and other wilderness walks, he explores the oft-hidden
connections between faith, society, and nature. Each reflection
ranges widely through history, folklore, poetry, philosophy, and
theology to consider what these paradoxes can teach us about God,
ourselves, and our world. Drawing on the recent upsurge in interest
in the personal experience of landscapes and memory, this book
invites readers to walk with Clavier in the Appalachians, Norway,
Iceland, the Alps, and around Britain as he discovers the ways in
which Christianity is profoundly earthed. By weaving together
nature-writing, memoir, social commentary, and theological
reflection A Pilgrimage of Paradoxes uses a memorable mountain
journey in the ancient landscape of Wales to draw readers into
reflecting about what it means to belong. Please find the study
guide for this book here:
https://convivium-brecon.com/a-pilgrimage-of-paradoxes/
The subject of infant baptism is undoubtedly a delicate and
difficult one ... But this must not make members of the Church of
England shrink from holding decided opinions on the subject. That
church has declared plainly in its Articles that 'the baptism of
young children is in any wise to be retained, as most agreeable
with the institution of Christ.' To this opinion we need not be
afraid to adhere." J. C. Ryle This book aims to help Anglican
Evangelicals recover that same gracious yet unashamed confidence
shown by Bishop Ryle in the nineteenth century. The authors defend
biblically the doctrine of infant baptism and its proper
evangelical practice within the Church of England. They expound a
covenantal understanding which has impeccable evangelical
credentials in order to reassure a new generation of Anglican
Evangelical 'paedobaptists' that theirs is no new or peculiar
doctrine, and to persuade those who may not have fully appreciated
the Reformed heritage we in the Church of England enjoy. Dr. John
R. W. Stott CBE is Rector Emeritus of All Souls, Langham Place in
London and over the last 60 years has been one of the most
influential leaders of evangelicalism worldwide. Dr. J. Alec Motyer
is the former Principal of Trinity College, Bristol, and was for
many years incumbent of St. Luke's, West Hampstead and later
minister of Christ Church, Westbourne Lee Gatiss is Associate
Minister of St. Helen's Bishopsgate and Editor of The Theologian
(www.theologian.org.uk).
In this book, Ligita Ryliskyte addresses what is arguably the most
important and profound question in systematic theology: What does
it mean for humankind to be saved by the cross? Offering a
constructive account of the atonement that avoids pitting God's
saving love against divine justice, she provides a
biblically-grounded and philosophically disciplined theology of the
cross that responds to the exigencies of postmodern secular
culture. Ryliskyte draws on Bernard J. F. Lonergan's development of
the Augustinian-Thomist tradition to argue that the justice of the
cross concerns the orderly communication and diffusion of divine
friendship. It becomes efficacious in the dynamic order of the
emergent universe through the transformation of evil into good out
of love. Showing how inherited theological traditions can be
transposed in new contexts, Ryliskyte's book reveals a Christology
of fundamental significance for contemporary systematic theology,
as well as the fields of theological ethics and Christian
spirituality.
Penitential practice in the Holy Roman Empire 900-1050, examined
through records in church law, the liturgy, monastic and other
sources. This study examines all forms of penitential practice in
the Holy Roman Empire under the Ottonian and Salian Reich, c.900 -
c.1050. This crucial period in the history of penance, falling
between the Carolingians' codification of public and private
penance, and the promotion of the practice of confession in the
thirteenth century, has largely been ignored by historians. Tracing
the varieties of penitential practice recorded in church law, the
liturgy, monastic practice, narrative and documentary sources, Dr
Hamilton's book argues that many of the changes previously
attributed to the twelfth and thirteenth centuries can be found
earlier in the tenth and early eleventh centuries. Whilst
acknowledging that there was a degree of continuity from the
Carolingian period, she asserts that the period should be seen as
having its own dynamic. Investigating the sources for penitential
practice by genre, sheacknowledges the prescriptive bias of many of
them and points ways around the problem in order to establish the
reality of practice in this area at this time. This book thus
studies the Church in action in the tenth and eleventh centuries,
the reality of relations between churchmen, and between churchmen
and the laity, as well as the nature of clerical aspirations. It
examines the legacy left by the Carolingian reformers and
contributes to our understanding of pre-Gregorian mentalities in
the period before the late eleventh-century reforms. SARAH HAMILTON
teaches in the Department of History, University of Exeter.
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