|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
During the past few decades there has been renewed interest in the
twentieth-century French Catholic philosopher Maurice Blondel
(1861-1949) and his influence on modern and contemporary theology,
but little scholarship has been published in the English-speaking
world. In Maurice Blondel: Transforming Catholic Tradition, Robert
Koerpel examines Blondel's work, the historical and theological
development of the idea of tradition in modern Catholicism,
tradition's relation to reason and revelation, and Blondel's
influence on Catholicism's understanding of tradition. The book
presents aspects of Blondel's thought that deserve to be more
widely known and contributes to important debates in current
theology on modern French Catholic thought and the emerging
conversations surrounding them. Koerpel looks to the cultural
context from which Blondel's thought emerges by situating it within
the broader conceptual, historical, and theological developments of
modernity. He examines the problem of reason and revelation in
modern Catholicism, the role and nature of tradition, and the
relationships between theology and history, truth and change,
nature and grace, and scripture and the development of doctrine.
This book provides readers with an appreciation of Blondel's
conceptually creative answer to how tradition represents the Word
of God in human history and why it is one of his most important
contributions to modern and contemporary theology. They will
discover how his contribution restores the animated vitality
between the institutional and liturgical dimensions of tradition
essential to the living, dynamic nature of Catholicism.
|
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.