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Troubled by the Great Depression, two world wars, and modernity's
challenges to religion, Bernard Lonergan attempted to do for our
age what Thomas Aquinas did for his: to integrate the best of
secular and sacred learning and thus further the Catholic tradition
of using both faith and reason to advance the common good and
participate in God's work of salvation. Drawing on modern advances
in the natural sciences, economics, history and psychology, as well
as ancient and medieval philosophy and theology, Lonergan's work is
highly fruitful but exceedingly complex. This book provides a basic
yet broad introduction to Lonergan's thought in particular and
Catholic theology in general. Mark T. Miller's approach is a
theological anthropology organised into three main categories,
""progress,"" ""decline,"" and ""redemption,"" which transpose the
traditional concepts of nature, sin, and grace into a contemporary
social and historical context. Progress is driven by the natural
human desire for God. Decline is a downward spiral of violence and
suffering caused by sin's perversion of the good, natural desire.
Redemption is God's gift of God's self that fulfills our natural
desire and becomes the foundation for authentic human living.
Throughout this introductory text, progress, decline and redemption
constitute a systematic framework for examining the central terms
of Catholic theology, as well as key notions in Lonergan's
theology. The book provides a firm foundation for students of
Lonergan as well as anyone interested in understanding Catholic
theology and applying it to ministry, education and other fields.
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