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Vessel of Honor: The Virgin Birth and the Ecclesiology of Vatican II
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 269

Vessel of Honor: The Virgin Birth and the Ecclesiology of Vatican II

The traditional claim that Mary remained a virgin during the very act of giving birth to Jesus is one of the least known and least understood aspects of Marian doctrine today. Has the contemporary Church retreated from this claim? In Vessel of Honor, Fr. Brian Graebe provides a solid introduction to the historical development of the doctrine and its reception in modern Catholic theology. He shows that, far from being responsible for its contemporary occlusion, the Second Vatican Council did much to reaffirm the traditional understanding of Mary’s perpetual virginity against its radical reinterpretation in the mid-twentieth century. Fr. Graebe demonstrates that the Council’s underapprecia...

The Splendor of the Church in Mary: Henri de Lubac, Vatican II and Marian Ressourcement
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 269

The Splendor of the Church in Mary: Henri de Lubac, Vatican II and Marian Ressourcement

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2023-05-05
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  • Publisher: CUA Press

Henri de Lubac, SJ, (1896-1991) is one of the most renowned theologians of the twentieth century. Numerous studies have been undertaken to examine his many contributions to theology, but little attention has been paid to the specific topic of the relationship of the Blessed Virgin Mary and the Church in his writings. This was a topic that gave rise to contentious discussion at the Second Vatican Council, and although the Council fathers approved the integration of Marian doctrine into the Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, this synthesis of Mariology and ecclesiology has been largely neglected in theology today. The Splendor of the Church in Mary retrieves de Lubac's Marian ecclesiology an...

Religious Liberty and the Hermeneutic of Continuity: Conservation and Development of Doctrine at Vatican II
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 511

Religious Liberty and the Hermeneutic of Continuity: Conservation and Development of Doctrine at Vatican II

The Second Vatican Council’s declaration Dignitatis Humanae marks a significant advance over prior magisterial teaching about the right to religious liberty, yet the nature of this advance has long been subject to controversy. Is it a true development, conserving and extending what came before? Or does it instead chart a new course entirely, rejecting and replacing the older teaching? In Religious Liberty and the Hermeneutic of Continuity, R. Michael Dunnigan takes up these pressing questions and offers a careful examination of how the claims of Dignitatis Humanae relate to the magisterial precedents set by the papacy in the nineteenth century. With precision and nuance, Dunnigan analyzes ...

Viri Dignitatem: Personhood, Masculinity and Fatherhood in the Thought of John Paul II
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 445

Viri Dignitatem: Personhood, Masculinity and Fatherhood in the Thought of John Paul II

In numerous works both before and after his papal election, John Paul II offers ample reflection on the themes of personhood, relationality, and sexual complementarity, but while he advances a clearly articulated theology of femininity and motherhood, as in his apostolic letter Mulieris Dignitatem, he might seem to offer no equivalent treatment of masculinity and fatherhood. In Viri Dignitatem, David Delaney seeks to surface and systematize the rich but often overlooked theology of masculinity and fatherhood that is found dispersed throughout John Paul II’s writings, demonstrating its essentiality for understanding his larger anthropology. In the first part of the study, Delaney treats the...

Pope Francis and the Liturgy
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 225

Pope Francis and the Liturgy

A study of Pope Francis’s example and teaching on relating the liturgy to living the mission of the liturgy in the world through holiness and mission.

Saved as through Fire: A Thomistic Account of Purgatory, Temporal Punishment, and Satisfaction
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 205

Saved as through Fire: A Thomistic Account of Purgatory, Temporal Punishment, and Satisfaction

In contemporary considerations of purgatory, there is increasing ecumenical agreement among Catholics, Orthodox, and Protestants about the need for spiritual purification and healing before a soul can enter into the glory of God’s presence in heaven. Yet for the broader tradition of the Church, this account of what souls require from God is paired with a complementary account of what God, in his justice, requires of the soul, including satisfaction of its “debt of punishment” (reatus poenae). Although the transformative and retributive aspects of purgatory are often seen today as being at odds with one another, Fr. Luke Wilgenbusch proposes in Saved as through Fire to recover their pro...

Christ the Logos of Creation: An Essay in Analogical Metaphysics
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 671

Christ the Logos of Creation: An Essay in Analogical Metaphysics

The Prologue of the Gospel of John identifies Jesus Christ as the eternal Word or Logos of the Father, who became flesh for the salvation of the world. Yet the world that Christ saves is his world from the beginning, for he is also the Logos of creation, the one “through whom all things were made” (John 1:3). This divinely revealed claim has profound implications not only for theology but also for metaphysics, whose relation to Christian doctrine was undermined over the course of the twentieth century, such that the Christian faith has become an increasingly private affair rather than a credible account of reality and an invitation to participate more fully in it. With Christ, the Log...

The Trinitarian Wisdom of God: Louis Bouyer’s Theology of the God-World Relationship
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 494

The Trinitarian Wisdom of God: Louis Bouyer’s Theology of the God-World Relationship

Christian theology in recent decades has seen an explosion in the number of books published seeking a renewal of Trinitarian ontology. There has also been a proliferation of studies dedicated to the theology of Wisdom. Few if any of these books on the Trinity or on Wisdom have drawn for inspiration on the comprehensive vision of French Oratorian priest Louis Bouyer (1913–2004), one of the greatest theologians of the modern age. Bouyer produced a comprehensive work of theology that integrated these two seminal concerns based on a vast “re-sourcing” of the Christian tradition. Dr. Keith Lemna explores Bouyer’s achievement in depth, showing that at the heart of his venture was a deep, c...

The Order and Division of Divine Truth: St. Thomas Aquinas as Scholastic Master of the Sacred Page
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 181

The Order and Division of Divine Truth: St. Thomas Aquinas as Scholastic Master of the Sacred Page

St. Thomas Aquinas is best known for his Summa Theologiae and is regarded as the great exemplar of systematic theology. Yet St. Thomas himself might be surprised at this legacy. He may well have saw himself principally as a commentator and teacher of Sacred Scripture. When it comes to engaging St. Thomas’ scriptural work, readers are at a significant disadvantage. They are arguably more foreign and more dense than his Summa yet have been scarcely studied. This book by one of the foremost experts on St. Thomas’ use of Scripture is a significant and much needed contribution. In The Order and Division of Divine Truth: St. Thomas Aquinas as Scholastic Master of the Sacred Page, John Boyle op...

A Bride Adorned: Mary–Church Perichoresis in Modern Catholic Theology
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 379

A Bride Adorned: Mary–Church Perichoresis in Modern Catholic Theology

Starting in the early to mid-nineteenth century, Catholic theology witnessed a profound retrieval of patristic reflection on the interrelationship of the Virgin Mary and the Church. This dynamic reached a doctrinal high point with the declarations of Vatican II and Pope Paul VI concerning Mary as “type of the Church” and “Mother of the Church,” and it also provided the impetus for further theological exploration of the deeper unity of the Mother of Christ and his mystical body. In A Bride Adorned, John L. Nepil examines how this interrelationship has been formulated in modern theology in terms of perichoresis, a notion of unconfused reciprocity or interpenetration drawn from Christol...