From the French Revolution to Vatican II, the institutional
Catholic Church has opposed much that modernity has offered men and
women constructing their societies. This book focuses on the
experiences of German Catholics as they have worked to engage their
faith with their culture in the midst of the two world wars, the
barbarism of the Nazi era, and the uncertainties and conflicts of
the post-World War II world.
German Catholics have confronted and challenged their Church's
anti-modernism, two lost wars, the Weimar Republic, the Nazi Third
Reich, the Cold War, German reunification and the impulses of
globalization. Catholic theologians and those others nurtured by
Catholicism, who resisted Nazism to create their own private
spaces, developed a personal and existential theology that bore
fruit after 1945. Such theologians as Karl Rahner, Johannes Metz,
and Walter Kasper, were rooted in their political experiences and
in the renewal movement built by those who attended Vatican II.
These theologians were sensitive to the horrors of the Nazi
brutalization, the positive contributions of democracy, and the
need to create a Catholicism that could join the conversation on
human rights following World War II. This dialogue meant accepting
non-Catholic religious traditions as authentic expressions of
faith, which in turn required that the sacred dignity of every man,
woman, and child had to be respected. By the twenty-first century,
Catholic theologians had made furthering a human rights agenda part
of their tradition, and the German contribution to Catholic
theology was crucial to that development. The current Catholic
milieu has been forged through its defensive responses to the
Enlightenment, through its resistance to ideologies that have
supported sanctioned murder, and through an extensive dialogue with
its own traditions.
In focusing on the German Catholic experience, Dietrich offers
a cultural approach to the study of the religious and ethical
issues that ground the human rights paradigm that will be of
particular interest to students of religion, historians,
sociologists, and human rights specialists.
General
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