A History of Catholic Moral Theology in the Twentieth Century: From Confessing Sins to Liberating Consciences
Autor James F. Keenanen Limba Engleză Paperback – 16 mar 2010
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780826429292
ISBN-10: 0826429297
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 152 x 226 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0826429297
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 152 x 226 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
This book is a much-needed survey of an exciting discipline. It shows how in one century moral theology has been transformed from the most conservative of theological disciplines to the most avant-guard.
Cuprins
Preface New Beginnings1. Moral Pathology and The Manualists2. The Inbreaking of History: Odon Lottin's Initiatives and His Legacy3. The Scriptures and Love: Tillman and Gilleman Either/or4. Moving toward two tracks: Pius Xii, Bernard Haring and Reaction5. ultimate authorities? Conscience and the Magisterium: Fuchs, Paul VI, and John Ford: 6. European Revisionism (universities) and American Proportionalism debate: Hoose Both and7. Feminism and Natural Law8. Justice and virtue9. Inculturation and Liberation New vision, new competence10. Epilogue: Working Locally, dialoging Globally
Recenzii
Mention in Rassegna Bibliografica Internazionale, 2010.
"Remolding material from a doctoral seminar he taught for 15 years, Keenan introduces students to the intellectual history of 20th-century Catholic moral theology and to the people who developed and debated it. He limits his study to such fundamentals as conscience, sin, love, virtue, and authority, and omits ethical concerns relating to society, sex, medicine, corporations, and the like. His topics are the moral manualists, Odon Lottin initiating reform, Fritz Tillmann and Gerard Gilleman retrieving scripture and charity, Berhard Haring's synthesis, the neo-manualists, for foundations for moral reasoning 1970-89, new foundations for a theological anthropology 1980-2000, and toward a global discourse on suffering and solidarity. A brief afterword reviews the encyclicals of Benedict XVI." - Eithne O'Leyne, BOOK NEWS, Inc.
'Whichever camp you are in this book will provide much food for thought. It touches on many of the burning moral issues that have captivated and divided Catholics over the past several decades and it ends with some optimistic words about the future.' Catholic Herald, 2nd July 2010
"Keenan...writes with the deftness, enthusiasm, and thoroughness one would expect from one of today's most prolific figures in the field....Highly recommended." - Choice
Reviewed in Church Times 17 September (UK) 'This is precisely what it says on the cover: a very thorough and very detailed account of the various developments in moral theology over the last century'
'Keenan's historical presentation is invaluable...helping the reader to enter the conversation and come to a balanced appraisal of the different ways of doing moral theology.'
'James F. Keenan has crafted an insightful narrative reflecting the contributions of multiple theologians associated with moral theology during the past century.'
James Keenan, SJ, offers a historical argument about the shape and scope of moral theology and captures with great clarity the shifting enterprise of moral theology in the last century, rightly claiming that moral theology is not a static discipline but the on-going search for truth, which proceeds differently in different times and places.
Keenan's conservative critics may not like the fact that the focus of moral theology has shifted from diagnosing "moral pathologies" to formation of conscience, but Keenan amply shows that it has. What's more, Keenan gives reason to think that his shift has been good: moral theology is no much more, well, theological that it was when the moral manuals, intended for confessors and parish priests, dominated the discipline.
This may be the only work in history of moral theology that presents the contributions from Asia, Africa and Latin America and integrate them into the history of moral theology. . . . Theologians and students of theology have to read this book to get an idea of the developments in contemporary moral theology as well as in other theological disciplines.
'A History of Catholic Moral Theology in the Twentieth Century is a remarkable achievement. The more I delved into the book the more I was impressed with Keenan's command of the issues and the literature across the globe. He seems to have omitted no one who has had a hand in shaping the development of moral theology, and he masterfully summarizes their core contributions. Footnotes are in abundance and identify significant works in many languages. This is the book for anyone interested in what has happened in moral theology and in who's who among its contributors. It is essential reading for graduate students of moral theology, since much of the history narrated here and the theologicans who have shaped it remain unknown territory to many of today's students.' -Richard M. Gula, S.S, April 5, 2010
Keenan's text captures the incredible dynamism that marked the history of Roman Catholic moral theology in the twentieth century. It is a gripping text, for at particular junctures, Keenan amplifies uncomfortable and unsettling arguments in the twentieth century that have arisen from moral theology's fundamental search for truth. In his own uncovering of yet another part of the moral theology tradition in this book, Keenan proffers hope to the discipline of moral theology, and keeps the conversation alive.
"Remolding material from a doctoral seminar he taught for 15 years, Keenan introduces students to the intellectual history of 20th-century Catholic moral theology and to the people who developed and debated it. He limits his study to such fundamentals as conscience, sin, love, virtue, and authority, and omits ethical concerns relating to society, sex, medicine, corporations, and the like. His topics are the moral manualists, Odon Lottin initiating reform, Fritz Tillmann and Gerard Gilleman retrieving scripture and charity, Berhard Haring's synthesis, the neo-manualists, for foundations for moral reasoning 1970-89, new foundations for a theological anthropology 1980-2000, and toward a global discourse on suffering and solidarity. A brief afterword reviews the encyclicals of Benedict XVI." - Eithne O'Leyne, BOOK NEWS, Inc.
'Whichever camp you are in this book will provide much food for thought. It touches on many of the burning moral issues that have captivated and divided Catholics over the past several decades and it ends with some optimistic words about the future.' Catholic Herald, 2nd July 2010
"Keenan...writes with the deftness, enthusiasm, and thoroughness one would expect from one of today's most prolific figures in the field....Highly recommended." - Choice
Reviewed in Church Times 17 September (UK) 'This is precisely what it says on the cover: a very thorough and very detailed account of the various developments in moral theology over the last century'
'Keenan's historical presentation is invaluable...helping the reader to enter the conversation and come to a balanced appraisal of the different ways of doing moral theology.'
'James F. Keenan has crafted an insightful narrative reflecting the contributions of multiple theologians associated with moral theology during the past century.'
James Keenan, SJ, offers a historical argument about the shape and scope of moral theology and captures with great clarity the shifting enterprise of moral theology in the last century, rightly claiming that moral theology is not a static discipline but the on-going search for truth, which proceeds differently in different times and places.
Keenan's conservative critics may not like the fact that the focus of moral theology has shifted from diagnosing "moral pathologies" to formation of conscience, but Keenan amply shows that it has. What's more, Keenan gives reason to think that his shift has been good: moral theology is no much more, well, theological that it was when the moral manuals, intended for confessors and parish priests, dominated the discipline.
This may be the only work in history of moral theology that presents the contributions from Asia, Africa and Latin America and integrate them into the history of moral theology. . . . Theologians and students of theology have to read this book to get an idea of the developments in contemporary moral theology as well as in other theological disciplines.
'A History of Catholic Moral Theology in the Twentieth Century is a remarkable achievement. The more I delved into the book the more I was impressed with Keenan's command of the issues and the literature across the globe. He seems to have omitted no one who has had a hand in shaping the development of moral theology, and he masterfully summarizes their core contributions. Footnotes are in abundance and identify significant works in many languages. This is the book for anyone interested in what has happened in moral theology and in who's who among its contributors. It is essential reading for graduate students of moral theology, since much of the history narrated here and the theologicans who have shaped it remain unknown territory to many of today's students.' -Richard M. Gula, S.S, April 5, 2010
Keenan's text captures the incredible dynamism that marked the history of Roman Catholic moral theology in the twentieth century. It is a gripping text, for at particular junctures, Keenan amplifies uncomfortable and unsettling arguments in the twentieth century that have arisen from moral theology's fundamental search for truth. In his own uncovering of yet another part of the moral theology tradition in this book, Keenan proffers hope to the discipline of moral theology, and keeps the conversation alive.