Showing Results for
- Academic Journals (212)
Search Results
- 212
Academic Journals
- 212
-
From:Theological Studies (Vol. 76, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThis article gathers and develops some fragmentary suggestions made by theologians and Pope John Paul II about tradition as the collective memory of the church. In the light of insights coming from anthropology,...
-
From:Theological Studies (Vol. 74, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThe author asks whether the criteria for Catholic theology presented by the International Theological Commission's Theology Today (2011) are meant to constitute "walls" that seal out or "windows" that open to the rich...
-
From:Theological Studies (Vol. 66, Issue 3) Peer-Reviewed[The author analyzes U.S. Catholic perspectives on economic livelihood at the beginnings of the 20th and 21st centuries, giving particular attention to the influence of beliefs and practices surrounding gender....
-
From:First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life (Issue 158)* "Chrismukkah." That was last December's commercial novelty in the service of inclusiveness. The Catholic League and the New York Board of Rabbis were not amused. They issued a joint statement: "We are deeply concerned...
-
From:Theological Studies (Vol. 64, Issue 3) Peer-Reviewed[In the course of his critique of Richard Gaillardetz's views on the ordinary universal magisterium, Professor Welch also called into question certain formulations on that topic articulated in various writings of...
-
From:First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life (Issue 233)Karl Rahner was once the figure to be reckoned with. When, at the very outset of the Second Vatican Council, the gathered bishops rejected the schema on revelation prepared in advance by the Holy Office, they signaled...
-
From:Theological Studies (Vol. 76, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedRobert Doran's article in this issue derives from his Emmett Doerr Lecture entitled "A New Project in Systematic Theology" delivered at Marquette University on October 24,2014. Astonished at his vision, I asked him to...
-
From:Currents in Theology and Mission (Vol. 38, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedIn his magnum opus, Tradition and Traditions, the first volume of which was published just before the Second Vatican Council, Fr. Yves Congar argued persuasively that the Council Fathers at Trent had explicitly rejected...
-
From:First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life (Issue 228)He was a giant. At the end of his long and productive life, the Swiss theologian was chosen by John Paul II to become a cardinal, and Benedict XVI (then Cardinal Ratzinger) preached his funeral homily. Henri de Lubac...
-
From:Harvard Theological Review (Vol. 111, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedAbstract The study proposes an analysis of the concepts of ousia and hypostasis in the theology of the Council of Antioch which condemned Paul of Samosata in 268 CE. The authentic reports preserved from the assembly...
-
From:Christianity and Literature (Vol. 68, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThis article compares John Donne's sermonic treatment of the beatific vision to the related but divergent treatment of the theme in his poem "Good Friday: Made as I was Riding Westward that Day." Never one simply to...
-
From:Theological Studies (Vol. 74, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedVatican II has more than a simple historical interest. What truly counts is comprehending its contemporary relevance and bearing its heritage within ourselves today. If we focus on the council's governing ideas and...
-
From:First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life (Issue 160)In his influential book The Courage to Be Catholic, George Weigel wrote about the "The Truce of 1968." By that is meant the decision not to discipline the many theologians and priests who, in a public and concerted...
-
From:Theological Studies (Vol. 67, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedIn a recent issue of L'Osservatore Romano Karl Becker argued that, contrary to a common interpretation of the change made in the drafting of Lumen gentium no. 8 from est to subsistit in, Vatican H never departed from...
-
From:First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public LifeJohn Henry Newman joined the Catholic Church on October 9, 1845, after concluding that the via media of Anglo-Catholicism, which he had sought for years to vindicate, existed only in theory, a dream of dons. He had...
-
From:Theological Studies (Vol. 68, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThis article follows recent scholarship in identifying a robustly pro-Nicene trinitarianism in Augustine's De Trinitate. In particular, a "Johannine logic" is identified and traced as an exegetical basis for his...
-
From:Harvard Theological Review (Vol. 100, Issue 1) Peer-Reviewed
The anarchic principle of Christian eschatology in the Eucharistic tradition of the Eastern Church *
Theology in the 20th century witnessed a shift in emphasis: The talk about the last things did not have to come last any more as the traditional handbooks of systematic theology would have it; eschatology was no longer... -
From:Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies (Vol. 12, Issue 35) Peer-ReviewedMoral theology explores the sources of the moral teaching in several religions. It is the branch of theology that analyzes the scriptural, rational, and ministerial bases of moral teaching on various issues in Christian...
-
From:First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life (Issue 180)* Catholic social doctrine from Leo XIII to Benedict XVI, Bernard Laurent relentlessly argues, is one of relentless "intransigence" against the Enlightenment, modernity, liberalism, and all their pomps and works. That...
-
From:Church History (Vol. 76, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedHilary of Poitiers and Basil of Ancyra were unlikely companions. The former was a Latin bishop from a backwater part of Gaul who had only recently become immersed in the Trinitarian controversy. The latter was a leading...