Tuesday, March 24, 2015
Another Western Saint in Need of an Icon Depiction?
Quote for March 24th"He who trusts himself is lost. He who trusts in God can do all things."- St Alphonsus Liguori
Posted by Zenit News Agency on Tuesday, March 24, 2015
Also to be published by CUA Press in April 2015
Knowing the Natural Law: From Precepts and Inclinations to Deriving Oughts
Steven Jensen
The Incarnate Lord: A Thomistic Study in Christology
Thomas Joseph White, OP
Steven Jensen
The Incarnate Lord: A Thomistic Study in Christology
Thomas Joseph White, OP
Labels:
books,
Christology,
CUA Press,
Steven Jensen,
Thomas Joseph White OP
Keith Lemna
He has written on Fr. Bouyer; perhaps he would be interested in a conference on Bouyer?
faculty page
Related:
Rev. Louis Bouyer: A Theological Giant | An Interview with Dr. Keith Lemna
"Perhaps the most fruitful terrain for future study of his thought at this point would be in comparing his work with Newman, say, or with that of Hans Urs von Balthasar. Balthasar, near the end of his life, placed his own thought in the "school" of Bouyer and the biblical scholars Heinz SchŸrmann and Heinrich Schlier. He distinguished this "school," all of whose adherents were rooted in biblical theology, from Henri de Lubac's ressourcement theology, with which Balthasar has generally been associated. The coherence between Bouyer's thinking and Newman's is worthy of its own special study. Moreover, only Pope Benedict XVI rivals Bouyer in being both a theologian and a scholar of liturgy. There is much that needs to be said regarding the uniquely liturgical theologies of both of these great men of the Church."
philpapers: "Louis bouyer's sophiology: A balthasarian retrieval," Heythrop Journal 52 (4):628-642 (2011)
faculty page
Related:
Rev. Louis Bouyer: A Theological Giant | An Interview with Dr. Keith Lemna
"Perhaps the most fruitful terrain for future study of his thought at this point would be in comparing his work with Newman, say, or with that of Hans Urs von Balthasar. Balthasar, near the end of his life, placed his own thought in the "school" of Bouyer and the biblical scholars Heinz SchŸrmann and Heinrich Schlier. He distinguished this "school," all of whose adherents were rooted in biblical theology, from Henri de Lubac's ressourcement theology, with which Balthasar has generally been associated. The coherence between Bouyer's thinking and Newman's is worthy of its own special study. Moreover, only Pope Benedict XVI rivals Bouyer in being both a theologian and a scholar of liturgy. There is much that needs to be said regarding the uniquely liturgical theologies of both of these great men of the Church."
philpapers: "Louis bouyer's sophiology: A balthasarian retrieval," Heythrop Journal 52 (4):628-642 (2011)
Labels:
Hans Urs von Balthasar,
Keith Lemna,
Louis Bouyer,
people
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