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These original essays offer thought-provoking perspectives on the
complex evolution of the papacy in the last 500 years, from the
pope as an Italian Renaissance prince to the pope as a universal
pastor concerned with the well-being and salvation of human beings
everywhere on earth. Structured by detailed studies of some of the
most significant popes in this evolution, this volume explores how
papal policies and actions were received as the popes sought to
respond to the political, cultural, and social circumstances of
their time. Included are essays examining pontificates from that of
Julius II, warrior as well as patron of the arts, to the era of the
French Revolution and Napoleon, to Paul VI's pleas for peace during
the Cold War, and to John Paul II's itinerant, prophetic, and
hierarchical model of a pastoral papacy in the age of television
and the internet.
These original essays offer thought-provoking perspectives on the
complex evolution of the papacy in the last 500 years, from the
pope as an Italian Renaissance prince to the pope as a universal
pastor concerned with the well-being and salvation of human beings
everywhere on earth. Structured by detailed studies of some of the
most significant popes in this evolution, this volume explores how
papal policies and actions were received as the popes sought to
respond to the political, cultural, and social circumstances of
their time. Included are essays examining pontificates from that of
Julius II, warrior as well as patron of the arts, to the era of the
French Revolution and Napoleon, to Paul VI's pleas for peace during
the Cold War, and to John Paul II's itinerant, prophetic, and
hierarchical model of a pastoral papacy in the age of television
and the internet.
Many contexts have shaped Benedict XVI during his life, but how did
Joseph Ratzinger come to be such a great theologian "with his
polemical bent and his keen eye for where the Gospel and the world
diverge?" Joseph Ratzinger's Theological Ideas attempts to answer
this question, tracing his development from the small Bavarian boy
born on Easter Saturday 1927 to the priest, professor, pastor,
Prefect, and finally Pope. The book explores tensions experienced
by Joseph Ratzinger in his earlier life that have been important in
shaping his chosen theological direction, as well as tensions that
proceed from the ecumenical context of German theologizing to the
relationship between academic freedom and Church authority. While
providing great insight into how this particular theologian, now
Pope Benedict XVI, emerged, Joseph Ratzinger's Theological Ideas
also sheds light on this man's theological work as a whole.
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