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Roger Haight

    Spiritual and Religious
    Christian Community in History, Volume 3
    Christian Community in History Volume 2
    Facing Race: The Gospel in an Ignatian Key
    Jesus Symbol of God
    • Already hailed as a landmark in contemporary Catholic theology, Jesus Symbol of God surveys scriptural data, the key moments in the development of doctrine, and the distinctive horizons of our contemporary world to develop a comprehensive and systematic christology for our time. The task of christology is to explain what it means to say that Jesus is the bearer and revealer of God in the Christian community, the decisive mediation of God's salvation -- or, in other words, the symbol of God.

      Jesus Symbol of God
    • Exploring the Ignatian Spiritual Exercises, this work delves into the intersection of spirituality and social issues, particularly racism. It uses the context of racial injustice to illuminate the concept of sin, encouraging readers to reflect on their spiritual lives in relation to societal realities. By grounding spiritual practices in contemporary struggles, the book aims to foster a deeper understanding of both personal and communal sin, inviting a transformative approach to faith and action.

      Facing Race: The Gospel in an Ignatian Key
    • "Ecclesiology from below," as it operates in this work, is directed to history; it moves through the actual church of history to ecclesiology or to an understanding of the church both as it is and as it should be. In the first volume that passage was fairly explicit because comprehensive ecclesiologies in our sense did not exist. In this volume ecclesiology itself becomes much more directly the subject matter of the book, but without losing sight of concrete history and the degree to which these ecclesiologies are historically conditioned. Put somewhat differently, the main goal of this "comparative ecclesiology" is not simply to lay down one after another different ecclesiologies that emerged over the last five hundred years, although that describes the book with empirical accuracy. Its larger intent is to show the richness, vitality, and creativity of the whole church as it moves through history, adjusting to new times, places, and cultures.

      Christian Community in History Volume 2
    • The first 2 volumes of Roger Haight's Christian Community in History received enormous critical attention. Of volume 2, a reviewer in the Anglican Theological Review wrote: "This work is worthy of celebration...anyone who cares about the theology of the church must read it." Those volumes of Christian Community in History described the historical diversity of the church across its history (up to the Reformation in vol. 1) and among the churches (since the Reformation in vol. 2). By contrast, vol. 3 is an attempt to describe what the churches possess in common, i.e., to retrieve ecclesiological constants from history reaching back to scriptural origins in order to construct and portray the common ecclesial existence shared by the churches. In more traditional terms, it aims to find the apostolicity, the catholicity, and the unity amidst the plurality of the churches.

      Christian Community in History, Volume 3
    • Spiritual and Religious

      • 224pagine
      • 8 ore di lettura

      Collected essays on various topics in religion and spirituality by a world- renowned theologian and author.

      Spiritual and Religious