Theological Studies

The Freedom of Christ in the Later Lonergan

The human freedom of Christ is a test case for how genuinely we admit the reality of Christ’s humanity. This article presents Christ’s freedom in light of Bernard Lonergan’s later theology. A defining influence on the matter in this period was Lonergan’s developing understanding of intentionality analysis. The article explains this complex notion and then

Religious Pluralism and the Coincidence of Opposites

The author discusses a theology of religious pluralism in light of the Trinity-Christ relationship. As the Trinity is the paradigm for interpreting religious diversity from a Christian perspective, so the significance of Christ as mediating center of a relational God is explored. Bonaventure’s coincidence of opposites helps break open the Christ mystery as one that

Divine Wrath and Human Anger: Embarrassment Ancient and New

The author argues that embarrassment over references to divine wrath in more recent times reflects a similar embarrassment or at least ambivalence among writers, pagan and Christian, in Late Antiquity. Patristic writers were especially sensitive to the ways human rage could inform Scripture readers’ understanding of divine wrath. Although insisting that God’s indignation was a

Proclamation as Dialogue: Transition in the Church–World Relationship

Vatican Il’s Gaudium et spes sees the church-world relationship in dialogical terms. This article argues that conceiving the church-world relationship as a dialogue is an important element in the council’s recognition of what Charles Taylor calls the “modern social imaginary.” The article defends the council’s view of dialogue against the argument that contemporary Western views

Mission AD Gentes and the Perils of Racial Privilege

Building on an episode in Uganda, the author considers ethical issues facing missionaries due to race-based privileges. He uses the notion of white privilege to consider how missionaries should negotiate the default racialization found in missionary settings where race operates differently than it does where white privilege is usually found. Racial privileges intensify the competing

Wound Made Fountain: Toward a Theology of Redemption

The heuristic of retributive punishment on which theology has often relied to explain the Crucifixion, argues the author, does not help us understand how this event was responsive to the wounds of the violated. A heuristic of empathetic identification, however, enables us to develop a theology of redemption that appreciates how God’s loving embrace of

Lonergan and Pannenberg’s Methodologies: A Critical Examination

Perhaps without intending it, Robert Doran began a conversation that contrasts the methodological procedures of Wolfhart Pannenberg with the methodology of Bernard Lonergan. This essay explores the differences further and shows how a clarification of these two distinct but helpful methodological procedures not only enhances an understanding of the mysteries of the Christian faith and

On the Dynamic Relation between Ecclesiology and Congregational Studies

The liveliness of the discipline of ecclesiology depends on the cross-referencing between theological doctrines about the church and actual churches. In an intellectual pincer movement these authors argue that the theological discipline of ecclesiology has to be chastened by consideration of the congregations in order to be credible, and that congregational studies needs the input

Gregory the Great and the Sixth-Century Dispute over the Ecumenical Title

The article explores the showdown between Pope Gregory I and Patriarch John IV of Constantinople over the ecumenical title. It argues that the promotion of the title coincided with other Eastern challenges to Roman prestige and that Gregory’s diplomatic strategies evolved over the course of the controversy. While nothing in his correspondence suggests that he

Interconnectedness and Intrinsic Value as Ecological Principles: An appropriation of Karl Rahner’s Evolutionary Christology

The ecological crisis today is due in great part to a widespread anthropocentric attitude toward nature characterized by (1) a dualism that sees humanity as totally distinct from nature and (2) an instrumentalism that sanctions an indiscriminate use of nature for the sake of humans. To offset the possible destructiveness of this anthropocentrism, we need

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