|
Showing 1 - 25 of
25 matches in All Departments
One of the twentieth-century's masterpieces of Catholic theology.
"World and Church" deals with the conflict between religiosity and
life in the world. Deliberately, Schillebeeckx turns around the
order of the words in the idiom 'church and world', thereby
stressing the embedding of faith and church life in particular
contexts. In the first three chapters he reflects on this tension
as he experienced it in burgeoning existentialism and debates
between Catholics and Marxists in those turbulent years in Paris,
where he was living immediately after World War II. It includes
thoughts on pastoral work among the working class and the then
popular pretres-ouvriers movement. He looks at some social problems
and the mutual interrogation of believers and non-believers, also
in light of the ideological compartmentalisation ('pillarization')
evident in diverse spheres of European society: education, social
work and health care. Schillebeeckx concludes by considering the
responsibility of Catholic intellectuals and academics for the
future of the world and the church, including the possible
significance of a Catholic university
This book was originally planned as the 'ecclesiological' third
part of Schillebeeckx Jesus trilogy. It indeed concludes his
thinking about the relevance of the living Jesus through history,
but with a different approach than originally intended. By the end
of the 20th century, many believers have left the unworldly
'super-naturalistic' preconciliar church behind.. Those who leave
the church, often leave a church that claims to be the direct
mediator of God's will. However, the church is not a flawless gift
from heaven. It is the vulnerable work of human beings which tries
to find accurate ways to comply to the heart of the gospel message.
In a time that is characterized by polarization in the church,
Schillebeeckx does not forget to look at the unprecedented and
authentic flourishing of the gospel . This book therefore contains
the testimony of a theologian who tried, during the course of his
life, to describe what God can mean for people today.
As a result of the publication of "Jesus. An Experiment in
Christology" (volume 6) and "Christ. The Christian Experience in
the Modern World "(volume 7), Schillebeeckx was accused of denying
the divinity of Jesus and the resurrection as objective reality. In
this 'interim report' he responds to these criticisms.
Schillebeeckx argues that the interpretation of his publications
depends to a large extent on what the reader takes as a starting
point. This book, therefore, is about presuppositions and methods
of interpretation. Schillebeeckx begins by looking once again at
the nature of revelation, at the ways in which religious faith is
experienced and expressed in the modern world, and at sources of
authority. He then discusses specific criticisms. Can he be called
a neo-liberal? Does he devalue the church's tradition? Is his
Christology inadequate? What does he really believe concerning the
resurrection? Then, towards the end, in some poetically powerful
passages, he turns once again to the nature of the Kingdom of God,
creation and salvation.
This is a unique selection of Edward Schillebeeckx' collection,
translated into English here for the first time. This is a
collection of essays from one of the most eminent Catholic
theologians of the late 20th century. Edward Schillebeeckx
Collected Works bring together the most important and influential
works of the Dutch Dominican and theologian Edward Schillebeeckx
(1914-2009) in a reliable edition. All translations have been
carefully checked or revised, some texts are presented in English
for the first time. The page numbers of earlier editions are
included. Each volume carries a foreword by an internationally
renowned Schillebeeckx expert. This edition makes Schillebeeckx
available for a new generation of scholars and students.
"God, the Future of Man" focuses on religion and secularisation,
viewed from various vantage points: secularisation and God-talk;
secularisation and the church's liturgy; secularisation and the
church's new self-understanding; and, finally, secularisation and
the future of humankind on earth in light of the eschaton (church
and social politics). These thought-provoking reflections are
presented against the backdrop of Schillebeeckx's hermeneutic
premises. In the concluding chapter his reflections on
secularisation culminate in a God concept that can function
fruitfully in a modern culture that assigns the future pride of
place: God as the future of humankind. Written in a period pregnant
with Cultural Revolution and religious change, the book foregrounds
the pivotal issue of secularisation in a thought-provoking way.
With feverish urgency he reflects on various forms of religiosity
in the modern world. His contribution to the debate could just as
well have been written today.
In effect" Revelation and Theology" is Schillebeeckx's general
introduction to theology. Its fifteen chapters were originally
published separately between 1954 and 1962, but the thematic
collection offers a vivid picture of the theological renewal in the
wake of World War II. Schillebeeckx's erudition and broad scholarly
orientation are clearly demonstrated in this volume. Throughout
there are pointers to the (at that time new) ecumenical approach to
Scripture and tradition. The problem concerning the function of the
scholastic tradition is highlighted. Although Schillebeeckx draws
extensively on Thomas Aquinas's thinking, this early work already
shows that he is not a (neo)Thomist in the narrow sense of the
word. Unlike the single Dutch volume, the English version was
published in two volumes. In the "Collected works of Edward
Schillebeeckx," however, here they are published together in the
sequence that the author envisaged.
"The Church with a Human Face: A New Expanded Theology of Ministry"
elaborates historically and theologically the main line of his
argument. It further includes reactions and reflections on
criticism he received. The work outlines the evolution of
ecclesiastical office, starting with Jesus Christ and his messianic
community, followed by a description of the practice and theology
of ministry in the early Christian communities, and tracing
different forms of ministry in the history of the Church. Of
particular interest is the section on the 'Complaints of the
People', which deals with the discontent of many connected with the
position of women and married priests. As long as women are not
allowed to participate fully in the decisions of the Church,
Schillebeeckx argues, they will not be liberated, and their
complaints will remain a fundamental charge that challenges the
church.
This is a new edition of the 1963 classic which gave Christological
thought a new direction. As far back as his first major book
Schillebeeckx propounded an anthropological approach to the
sacraments. In " Christ the Sacrament of the Encounter with God,"
he draws on theologically fruitful work by phenomenological
anthropologists like Merleau-Ponty, Buytendijk and Binswanger. That
makes Schillebeeckx's distinctive idiom and modern approach
appealing even today. He rediscovers, as it were from within, the
notions forged by scholastic theology, and thus restores to us a
theology of the sacraments rooted in the biblical and patristic
soil from which they first sprang. Schillebeeckx's speculative
synthesis of this quest still has a fresh ring to it. He describes
Christ as the primordial sacrament in a reflection on his public
ministry, death and resurrection inspired by the universal human
search for such a 'sacrament'. He concludes that the church's
sacraments have to be an earthly extension of the liberation
brought by Christ's story. Schillebeeckx ends by describing
sacraments as grace made visible that gives crowning moments in
Christian life a mystical quality. "Edward Schillebeeckx Collected
Works" bring together the most important and influential works of
the Dutch Dominican and theologian Edward Schillebeeckx (1914-2009)
in a reliable edition. All translations have been carefully checked
or revised, some texts are presented in English for the first time.
The page numbers of earlier editions are included. Each volume
carries a foreword by an internationally renowned Schillebeeckx
expert. This edition makes Schillebeeckx available for a new
generation of scholars and students.
A reprinting of SchillebeeckxAIs classic work. A standard in
understanding the relationship between Christ, Sacrament and the
Church. A positive and constructive ecclesial theology.
Christ. The Christian Experience in the Modern World focuses on the
question of salvation for all people. Using seven 'anthropological
constants', Schillebeeckx innovatively shows the social and
political relevance of faith. Inspired by liberation and feminist
theologies, he puts strong emphasis on human experience and on the
importance of examining church teaching in its historical context.
This volume is a testimony of Schillebeeckx' ground breaking
attempt to rethink doctrine in the light of the research on the
historical Jesus. Instead of starting with Christianity's great
creedal statements about Christ and the Trinity, he focuses on the
subjective experience of the first generations of believers as
expressed in the New Testament. This choice stirred considerable
controversy and a Vatican investigation but inspired and still
keeps to inspire readers in their personal approach to Christian
faith.
Contains The Layman In The Church; The Death Of A Christian; The
Second Vatican Council.
Contains The Layman In The Church; The Death Of A Christian; The
Second Vatican Council.
"The Understanding of Faith" (1974) is certainly Schillebeeckx's
most incisive English publication on theological hermeneutics. It
contains his principal ideas on this subject, in which he
progressively evolved the hermeneutic thinking that he was to apply
in due course in his famous Jesus books. The book centres on two
issues: how should the Christian message of God's kingdom be read
in our day and age, and can a present-day interpretation of that
message still be considered Christian? In short, what are the
possibilities and limits of the understanding of faith in our
modern age? Of course, hermeneutics as such was not new to
Christian theology. Exegetes had been exploring interpretive
processes for some time. Schillebeeckx's innovation was to extend
hermeneutic thinking to the possibilities and limits of
interpreting the entire Christian tradition, including its
definition in systematic theology. Inspired by the early Jurgen
Habermas's 'new critical theory', Schillebeeckx also expands
criticism of ideology in various directions. This was to influence
generations of theologians after him, right up the present day.
Edward Schillebeeckx (1914-) is a prominent Catholic theologian,
remarkable for having survived three inquiries into his possible
heresy by the Vatican. He explores traditional Catholic concepts in
the light of twentieth century understanding and is committed to
working out a satisfactory statement of the relationship between
the Church and the world. God is New Each Moment presents a series
of interviews, at once inspiring, provocative and illuminating,
between Schillebeeckx and fellow theologians Huub Oosterhuis and
Piet Hoogeveen.
In effect Revelation and Theology is Schillebeeckx's general
introduction to theology. Its fifteen chapters were originally
published separately between 1954 and 1962, but the thematic
collection offers a vivid picture of the theological renewal in the
wake of World War II. Schillebeeckx's erudition and broad scholarly
orientation are clearly demonstrated in this volume. Throughout
there are pointers to the (at that time new) ecumenical approach to
Scripture and tradition. The problem concerning the function of the
scholastic tradition is highlighted. Although Schillebeeckx draws
extensively on Thomas Aquinas's thinking, this early work already
shows that he is not a (neo)Thomist in the narrow sense of the
word. Unlike the single Dutch volume, the English version was
published in two volumes. In the Collected works of Edward
Schillebeeckx, however, here they are published together in the
sequence that the author envisaged.
World and Church deals with the conflict between religiosity and
life in the world. Deliberately, Schillebeeckx turns around the
order of the words in the idiom 'church and world', thereby
stressing the embedding of faith and church life in particular
contexts. In the first three chapters he reflects on this tension
as he experienced it in burgeoning existentialism and debates
between Catholics and Marxists in those turbulent years in Paris,
where he was living immediately after World War II. It includes
thoughts on pastoral work among the working class and the then
popular pretres-ouvriers movement. He looks at some social problems
and the mutual interrogation of believers and non-believers, also
in light of the ideological compartmentalisation ('pillarization')
evident in diverse spheres of European society: education, social
work and health care. Schillebeeckx concludes by considering the
responsibility of Catholic intellectuals and academics for the
future of the world and the church, including the possible
significance of a Catholic university
The Understanding of Faith (1974) is certainly Schillebeeckx's most
incisive English publication on theological hermeneutics. It
contains his principal ideas on this subject, in which he
progressively evolved the hermeneutic thinking that he was to apply
in due course in his famous Jesus books. The book centres on two
issues: how should the Christian message of God's kingdom be read
in our day and age, and can a present-day interpretation of that
message still be considered Christian? In short, what are the
possibilities and limits of the understanding of faith in our
modern age? Of course, hermeneutics as such was not new to
Christian theology. Exegetes had been exploring interpretive
processes for some time. Schillebeeckx's innovation was to extend
hermeneutic thinking to the possibilities and limits of
interpreting the entire Christian tradition, including its
definition in systematic theology. Inspired by the early Jurgen
Habermas's 'new critical theory', Schillebeeckx also expands
criticism of ideology in various directions. This was to influence
generations of theologians after him, right up the present day.
As a result of the publication of Jesus. An Experiment in
Christology (volume 6) and Christ. The Christian Experience in the
Modern World (volume 7), Schillebeeckx was accused of denying the
divinity of Jesus and the resurrection as objective reality. In
this 'interim report' he responds to these criticisms.
Schillebeeckx argues that the interpretation of his publications
depends to a large extent on what the reader takes as a starting
point. This book, therefore, is about presuppositions and methods
of interpretation. Schillebeeckx begins by looking once again at
the nature of revelation, at the ways in which religious faith is
experienced and expressed in the modern world, and at sources of
authority. He then discusses specific criticisms. Can he be called
a neo-liberal? Does he devalue the church's tradition? Is his
Christology inadequate? What does he really believe concerning the
resurrection? Then, towards the end, in some poetically powerful
passages, he turns once again to the nature of the Kingdom of God,
creation and salvation.
The Church with a Human Face: A New Expanded Theology of Ministry
elaborates historically and theologically the main line of his
argument. It further includes reactions and reflections on
criticism he received. The work outlines the evolution of
ecclesiastical office, starting with Jesus Christ and his messianic
community, followed by a description of the practice and theology
of ministry in the early Christian communities, and tracing
different forms of ministry in the history of the Church. Of
particular interest is the section on the 'Complaints of the
People', which deals with the discontent of many connected with the
position of women and married priests. As long as women are not
allowed to participate fully in the decisions of the Church,
Schillebeeckx argues, they will not be liberated, and their
complaints will remain a fundamental charge that challenges the
church.
This book was originally planned as the 'ecclesiological' third
part of Schillebeeckx Jesus trilogy. It indeed concludes his
thinking about the relevance of the living Jesus through history,
but with a different approach than originally intended. By the end
of the 20th century, many believers have left the unworldly
'super-naturalistic' preconciliar church behind. Those who leave
the church, often leave a church that claims to be the direct
mediator of God's will. However, the church is not a flawless gift
from heaven. It is the vulnerable work of human beings which tries
to find accurate ways to comply to the heart of the gospel message.
In a time that is characterized by polarization in the church,
Schillebeeckx does not forget to look at the unprecedented and
authentic flourishing of the gospel. This book therefore contains
the testimony of a theologian who tried, during the course of his
life, to describe what God can mean for people today.
This is a unique selection of Edward Schillebeeckx' collection,
translated into English here for the first time. This is a
collection of essays from one of the most eminent Catholic
theologians of the late 20th century. Edward Schillebeeckx
Collected Works bring together the most important and influential
works of the Dutch Dominican and theologian Edward Schillebeeckx
(1914-2009) in a reliable edition. All translations have been
carefully checked or revised, some texts are presented in English
for the first time. The page numbers of earlier editions are
included. Each volume carries a foreword by an internationally
renowned Schillebeeckx expert. This edition makes Schillebeeckx
available for a new generation of scholars and students.
God, the Future of Man focuses on religion and secularisation,
viewed from various vantage points: secularisation and God-talk;
secularisation and the church's liturgy; secularisation and the
church's new self-understanding; and, finally, secularisation and
the future of humankind on earth in light of the eschaton (church
and social politics). These thought-provoking reflections are
presented against the backdrop of Schillebeeckx's hermeneutic
premises. In the concluding chapter his reflections on
secularisation culminate in a God concept that can function
fruitfully in a modern culture that assigns the future pride of
place: God as the future of humankind. Written in a period pregnant
with Cultural Revolution and religious change, the book foregrounds
the pivotal issue of secularisation in a thought-provoking way.
With feverish urgency he reflects on various forms of religiosity
in the modern world. His contribution to the debate could just as
well have been written today.
This is a new edition of the 1963 classic which gave Christological
thought a new direction. As far back as his first major book
Schillebeeckx propounded an anthropological approach to the
sacraments. In Christ the Sacrament of the Encounter with God , he
draws on theologically fruitful work by phenomenological
anthropologists like Merleau-Ponty, Buytendijk and Binswanger. That
makes Schillebeeckx's distinctive idiom and modern approach
appealing even today. He rediscovers, as it were from within, the
notions forged by scholastic theology, and thus restores to us a
theology of the sacraments rooted in the biblical and patristic
soil from which they first sprang. Schillebeeckx's speculative
synthesis of this quest still has a fresh ring to it. He describes
Christ as the primordial sacrament in a reflection on his public
ministry, death and resurrection inspired by the universal human
search for such a 'sacrament'. He concludes that the church's
sacraments have to be an earthly extension of the liberation
brought by Christ's story. Schillebeeckx ends by describing
sacraments as grace made visible that gives crowning moments in
Christian life a mystical quality. Edward Schillebeeckx Collected
Works bring together the most important and influential works of
the Dutch Dominican and theologian Edward Schillebeeckx (1914-2009)
in a reliable edition. All translations have been carefully checked
or revised, some texts are presented in English for the first time.
The page numbers of earlier editions are included. Each volume
carries a foreword by an internationally renowned Schillebeeckx
expert. This edition makes Schillebeeckx available for a new
generation of scholars and students.
The existence of the historical Jesus cannot be doubted. But who
was Jesus of Nazareth? And who is he for us today? In this
controversial work Schillebeeckx offers his 'experiment': an
informative and sustained hermeneutical reflection on the story of
Jesus. It became a bestseller, and would become the first volume of
Schillebeeckx' trilogy on Jesus Christ. He presents a Christology
'from below', rooted in the synoptic gospels, but especially in
Mark and in the Q tradition. At the same time he is clearly
interested in portraying 'the historical Jesus' as both Proclaimer
and Proclaimed. In this major work Schillebeeckx tries to answer
questions such as: Is the promise of salvation only to be found in
Jesus Christ because he was a gift from God, as the Gospels tell
us? What can we say about the inspiration of so many who do not
attend church or adhere to any believe they find in Jesus Christ?
Schillebeeckx takes us into his promising quest that leads to the
ultimate question of what religious truth actually is.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|