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This tribute to Jacques Dupuis, Catholicism's foremost thinker on the theology of religions, explores his work and offers suggestions for extending his ideas. For twenty years Jacques Dupuis has been at the forefront of Catholic theological efforts to explore the implications of the Second Vatican Council and its positive reappraisal of the status of "other" religious traditions. A painstakingly thorough thinker, Dupuis has balanced insights from the core of tradition with an openness to the holy mystery of God's presence in the world. In treading that path he has demonstrated courage, integrity, and faith, and earned his reputation as one of the foremost theologians of our time. In this book, his Jesuit confreres Daniel Kendall and Gerald O'Collins have assembled essays by eighteen noted scholars. The book concludes with a complete bibliography of the work of Jacques Dupuis. Book jacket.
The critique of Jacques Dupuis, SJ, by the Vatican's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith at the direction of Joseph Ratzinger was met by almost universal dismay by Christian theologians and participants in interfaith dialogue throughout the world. This book is comprised of both responses by Father Dupuis to the Vatican's criticisms (which he was forbidden to publish during his lifetime) and introductory and background material by his friend and editor Bill Burrows, who draws on their many conversations to draw out the deeper implications of Dupuis' work and the background to the Vatican investigations and criticisms. In addition to laying bare procedural problems in the CDF's process, Dupuis shows that both the Vatican document Dominus Iesus and the Notification about problems in his work rest on dangerous misunderstandings of Scripture and church teaching that reverse the gains in interfaith understanding and ecumenism that have occurred over the past fifty years.
Before his death more than twelve years ago, Jacques Dupuis, a prominent Catholic theologian who faced a long persecution by his own church for his teachings on religious pluralism, sat down for a book-length interview with Gerard O'Connell, a noted Catholic journalist, for America. Dupuis insisted that the frank and honest transcript ("unburdened and unbuttoned," in the words of a fellow Jesuit) not be published until after he died and certain other curial figures were out of office. This hidden treasure is finally unburied and presents not only Dupuis' life story (including his tragic final years) but also his views on religious pluralism, interreligious dialogue, and ecclesiology.
In this incisive and important volume, Jacques Dupuis offers new insights on the most important issue facing Christian theology today -- giving an account of Christian faith as Christians go more deeply along the road of dialogue and collaboration with the followers of other religious traditions. His task is to square a dogmatic circle. How does one do justice to the Gospel claim that Jesus the Christ is the final and universal savior of all humankind in every age, while also doing justice to the experience that truth, grace, holiness, and power are experienced in other religious traditions? In the first six chapters Dupuis reviews the history of the Western Christian tradition's teaching on other religious Ways through the breakthrough at Vatican Council II. In chapters 7 and 8 he reviews the critical issues of uniqueness of Christ and Christian proposals to account for the mediation of salvation in other religious Ways. He discusses also the relationship between the Reign of God, the Church, and the Religions. In chapter 9 he explores the nature and role of dialogue in a pluralistic society. In chapter 10 offers sage reflections on interreligious prayer.
How does Christianity relate to other religions? Beginning with a consideration of the biblical perspective, Veli-Matti Kärkkäinen offers a detailed and comprehensive survey of the diverse explanations proposed by teachers of the church down through the ages. This indispensable guide is for anyone seeking to grasp Christianity?s relationship to world religions.
The results from a lifetime of study, reflection and experience in both Europe and Asia is this comprehensive examination of Christian theological understandings of world religious pluralism.
Introduction /Frans Wijsen and Peter Nissen -- 'Mission is a Must'. A missiological profile of Rogier van Rossum. /Peter Nissen -- The Epistle to Diognetus - An Open Dialogue /Leo Meulenberg -- The Conversion of a Missionary: Reflections on the Life of Martin of Nantes (1638-1714) /Jan Rietveld -- Missio ad gentes in the Spirituality of St. Vincent De Paul /Gerard van Winsen -- Church, Colonialism and Nationalism in Tanzania /Albert de Jong -- Searching for the heart of the Mayas Five hundred years of spreading Christianity in Guatemala /Mario Coolen -- The Trinity on Mission /Michael Amaladoss -- The Evolution, Involution and Revolution of the Concept and Reality of Mission and Evangelizati...
Vatican II was the first council in the story of Catholic Christianity to deserve being labeled intercontinental and intercultural. What has been its impact? How should one describe and evaluate its reception by Catholics and its wider follow-up among others? How should this twenty-first council be heard, received, and lived as we move further ahead into the twenty-first century? What perspectives does it offer for the future to those who seek to assimilate it creatively? As a leading theologian, the author uses a highly personal approach in answering these and many other questions, which makes for a compulsively readable book that illuminates the workings of the Church. Living Vatican II explores the liturgical renewal after Vatican II, the reception of the Council's moral teaching, the impact of Vatican II on theology, and the work of some key institutions in Rome and elsewhere toward implementing the teaching and decisions of this council. Finally, the book offers insightful suggestions about the future of the Church. Book jacket.
Introduction to the Mystery of the Church is an ecclesiological survey presenting a doctrinal synthesis of the Church. The author's intention is to propose an overview of this mystery in connection with the entirety of the Christian mystery. The book is divided into two major parts, the first presenting the foundations in the Bible and the tradition up to our day, and the second being an explanatory proposal introducing the reader to the Church's definition and personality and concluding with an exposition of the four properties enunciated in the Creed (one, holy, catholic, and apostolic). The value of this way of proceeding is first and foremost in the proposal of a synthesis that allows on...