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Jean Danielou's Doxological Humanism - Trinitarian Contemplation and Humanity's True Vocation (Paperback)
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Jean Danielou's Doxological Humanism - Trinitarian Contemplation and Humanity's True Vocation (Paperback)
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Synopsis: In the spring of 1946, Jean Danielou published an article
by the title of "Les orientations presents de la pensee religieuse"
for Etudes. Danielou's article--at least according to his
critics--set the program for what would be later referred to as la
nouvelle theologie. Though Danielou's influence was definitive at
the inception of the movement (loosely understood) and continued up
until Vatican II and after it, relatively little (especially
compared to his close associate Henri de Lubac) has been written
about Danielou in English even in the recent resurgence of interest
in nouvelle theologie. This book seeks to fill that gap in part by
providing an overview of his theology with extensive reference to
his vast corpus of writings by highlighting what seems to be the
key to his thought: that all human beings were made for
contemplation and that one is only truly human when one exercises
this innate calling in a Trinitarian fashion. Endorsements: "Marc
Nicholas's superb study of Jean Danielou demonstrates that our
modern, cultural melancholy derives largely from our saintlessness.
Yet a surpassing joy awaits all who are willing to embrace the
saintly life of prayer and contemplation as Danielou envisions it.
Far from being escapist and otherworldly, Nicholas reveals that a
liturgical existence is profoundly political. Christian saints
humanize the city of man, he shows, by building the city of God in
our midst." --Ralph C. Wood, Baylor University "Jean Danielou is
one of the less-studied figures in the twentieth-century Catholic
movement of nouvelle theologie. Nicholas remedies this by holding
him up as a theologian who successfully reintegrates theology and
spirituality, giving voice to an integral humanism that does true
justice to the doxological essence of humanity. Jean Danielou's
Doxological Humanism is a patient and careful account of many of
Danielou's writings, which sheds light on the French Jesuit's
deepest motivations." --Hans Boersma, Regent College "Drawing on
the resources of the unjustly forgotten Jean Danielou, Marc
Nicholas presents an extended argument for a theocentric humanism.
Nicholas shows how our ability to affirm the beauty and the dignity
of human existence stands or falls with the question of God. 'For
there is not one single human being, ' Danielou writes, 'who is not
destined, one day, to be transformed in Christ and to contemplate
the Trinity.'" --Nicholas J. Healy Jr., John Paul II Institute for
Studies on Marriage and Family Author Biography: Marc C. Nicholas
is an instructor in religion in the Philosophy department at
McLennan Community College in Waco, Texas.
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