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Applying the ethical concepts of Thomas Aquinas to contemporary
moral problems, this book both presents new interpretations of
Thomist theology and offers new insights into today's perplexing
moral dilemmas. This volume addresses such contemporary issues as
internalized oppression, especially as it relates to women and
African-Americans; feminism and anger; child abuse; friendship and
charity; and finally, justice and reason. The collection revives
Aquinas as an ethicist who has relevant things to say about
contemporary concerns. These essays illustrate how Thomistic ethics
can encourage and empower people in moral struggles. As the first
book to use Aquinas to explore such issues as child abuse and
oppression, it includes a variety of approaches to Aquinas' ethics.
"Aquinas and Empowerment" is a valuable resource for students of
classical thought and contemporary ethics.
Christian satisfaction stands at the center of the Church's
teaching about salvation. Satisfaction pertains to studies about
Christ, redemption, the Sacraments, and pastoral practice. The
topic also enters into questions about God and the creature as well
as about the divine mercy and providence. Somewhat neglected in the
period after Vatican II, satisfaction now appears to scholars as
the forgotten key to entering deeply into the mystery of Christ and
his work. Seminarians especially will benefit from studying the
place satisfaction holds in Catholic life. Further, ecumenical work
requires a proper understanding of the place that satisfaction
holds in Christian theology. Various factors operative since the
sixteenth century have worked to displace satisfaction almost
entirely from reformed practice and theology. To address such
concerns, The Godly Image, has, over the past several decades and
more, done a great deal to put satisfaction within its proper
context of image-restoration. That is, to interpret satisfaction
within the context of the divine mercy and not the divine justice.
This unique contribution to satisfaction studies owes a great deal
to the achievement of Saint Thomas Aquinas. In this sense, the book
enacts a retrieval of the theology of the high classical period.
Like much of Aquinas's refined teaching, a proper understanding
requires appeal to the commentatorial tradition that follows him.
Interested students will find in this study the touchstones for
further studies of these authors. The Godly Image aims also to
distinguish the theology of Aquinas from that of the medieval
author with whom the notion of satisfaction remains mostly
identified, that is, Anselm of Canterbury. Although not a developed
focus of the book's contents, the attentive reader will recognize
that Aquinas treats Saint Anselm with a reverential reading, even
as the Common Doctor moves significantly away from interpretations
of satisfaction that suggest that an angry God exacts from his
innocent Son a painful substitutional penalty for a fallen human
race.
Since the first followers of Saint Thomas Aquinas took up the task
of explaining and defending his writings, Thomists have influenced
deeply the Western intellectual tradition. Together they form a
school called Thomism that can claim an uninterrupted history since
the end of the thirteenth century. Using carefully selected
resources, Romanus Cessario has composed a short account of the
history of the Thomist tradition as it manifests itself through the
more than seven hundred years that have elapsed since the death of
Saint Thomas. A Short History of Thomism, originally published in
French as Le Thomisme et les Thomistes, supplies a need that has
not been met in over a century, and is the first such comprehensive
account written in English. The author, who has worked in the field
for more than thirty-five years, brings to his study an
appreciation for the place that Saint Thomas Aquinas holds as a
perennial teacher of Christian theology, and for the influence that
the Common Doctor has exercised on all stripes of theology and
philosophy. The book suggests suitable criteria for including and
excluding authors from the catalogue of Thomists, and proceeds to
identify the principal periods during which Thomism fared both well
and less well. Appeal to broader historical contexts helps the
reader locate Thomism within the flow of intellectual history as it
unfolds in the West. Representative figures in the history of
Thomism are named and their literary compositions described in
order to show the variety of ways that these authors have carried
on the tradition. To enable the reader to learn the positions that
are commonly identified with the Thomist school, the book includes
an exposition of its major theological and philosophical themes.
There are seven sacraments administered in the Catholic Church.
What are they, and what do they do? Why do human beings require
sacramentalized, visible realities to seal their confession of
faith in Jesus Christ? Why does the Catholic Church administer the
sacraments in the way that it does? Leading Catholic theologian
Romanus Cessario, OP, offers an in-depth explanation of the
seven sacraments celebrated in the Catholic Church. He addresses
the rationale for the sacraments and provides detailed exposition
of each one, highlighting the importance of the Catholic
tradition--and of Thomas Aquinas, in particular--for contemporary
reflection on the sacraments. This book examines why participation
in the sacramental life of the Church is required for the believing
Christian and helps readers understand the role the sacraments play
in the sanctification of the world.
Originally published in 2001, Introduction to Moral Theology
responded to the need for a new introduction to the basic and
central elements of Catholic moral theology written in the light of
Veritatis splendor. Since then, it has become a standard text for
students and a reputable resource on such topics as moral theology
and the good of the human person created in God's image; natural
law; principles of human action; determination of the moral good
through objects, ends, and circumstances; and the virtues, gifts of
the Holy Spirit, and the Beatitudes.
What does it mean to believe in God? This question still provokes a
recalcitrant world. In spite of the apparent disinterest of our
age, the religious question continues to task and to vex, sometimes
quietly, sometimes dramatically. When religious divisions occasion
civil strife, believers are faced with an even more radical
inquiry. Wherein lies the real truth about Christian doctrine and
its place in our lives? Can we appeal to any authority for belief?
How do we escape the suspicions of a skeptical age? In this book,
Romanus Cessario explores these questions and suggests responses
taken from the history of theology. He offers a readable account of
the accumulated wisdom of the Christian tradition concerning the
faith-question, citing as major authorities the saints, those who
have realized the will of God throughout the ages. Faith supplies
not only the assurance but also the substance of things hoped for.
The experience of Israel teaches that "God has foreseen something
better for us"; this "something better" resides in the Word of God
that takes flesh in the womb of the Virgin Mary. Because it keeps
being born again in the heart of every believer, as St. Thomas
Aquinas reminds us, it leads us to the blessedness of eternal life.
Since the end of the Second Vatican Council in 1965, authors have
dealt mainly with the existential dimensions of Christian life.
This volume, the fruit of more than two decades of contemplation on
the virtues of Christian life, complements these as well as
historical studies about faith. It presents a coherent meditation
on faith's principal concerns: its acts of belief and confession,
and its character as a virtue in the Christian life. Father
Cessario explains how the mysteries of faith--what the Christian
believer professes each Sunday in the Creed--transform our lives
and make us living images of the Triune God. Consequently, this
book will meet a wide range of needs by answering the questions of
the informed reader, animating study groups and parish seminars,
and stimulating the ordinary believer to appropriate "the depth of
the riches and the wisdom and knowledge of God." ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Romanus Cessario, O.P., is professor of systematic theology at St.
John's Seminary in Brighton, Massachusetts. Before assuming this
post in the fall of 1995, Father Cessario taught at the Dominican
House of Studies in Washington, D.C. He served there as Academic
Dean from 1979 to 1987. He is the author of numerous works,
including The Moral Virtues and Theological Ethics, Le Virtu, and
Perpetual Angelus: As the Saints Pray the Rosary, and presently
serves on the editorial boards of The Thomist, the French journal
Pierre d'Angle, and the National Catholic Register.
First published in 1991, "The Moral Virtues and Theological
Ethics"introduced readers to an approach in Christian ethics that
was not then much in vogue. Although the Second Vatican Council had
marked a departure from the legalistic code of proper conduct for
Catholics (known since the Catholic Reformation as "casuistry"),
few Catholic theologians had yet begun to explore an ethics based
on moral virtues rather than one based on narrow, prescriptive
rules.At the forefront of studies that would begin to recover
virtue ethics--the ethical teaching of the church in the patristic,
monastic, and scholastic traditions--"The Moral Virtues and
Theological Ethics"has been widely used to introduce both students
and scholars to the relatively "new" idea of virtue ethics, now a
dominant principle in Catholic moral theology. Following a brief
new preface, the text of the six chapters in the original edition
remains unchanged. However, Romanus Cessario, O.P., has
substantially updated the citations in the notes to account for
recent literature on the subject and has written a new chapter that
accommodates his original study to the current ethos of moral
theology. He draws on documents of the Catholic Church since 1991
to enrich the contemporary discussion of moral virtues and the
dynamics of living a happy life. This second edition will inspire a
new generation of readers, especially students and teachers of
moral theology.
The chief characteristic of Christian morality is its being linked
to the person of Jesus Christ who is himself the universal,
personal and concrete norm of moral action. This book is about the
virtues of the Christian life - both the theological virtues
(faith, hope, and charity) and the cardinal virtues (prudence,
justice, fortitude and temperance) - and it deals particularly with
the question: how it is possible for believers to decide the moral
good and to live accordingly? Reflecting on the basic questions of
Christian morality, the book offers a commentary on the
corresponding sections of the Catechism of the Catholic Church.
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