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Newman On Vatican Ii 1st Edition Ian Ker

  • SKU: BELL-5893480
Newman On Vatican Ii 1st Edition Ian Ker
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Newman On Vatican Ii 1st Edition Ian Ker instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxford University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.66 MB
Pages: 192
Author: Ian Ker
ISBN: 9780191634154, 9780191788109, 9780198717522, 0191634158, 0191788104, 0198717520
Language: English
Year: 2014
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Newman On Vatican Ii 1st Edition Ian Ker by Ian Ker 9780191634154, 9780191788109, 9780198717522, 0191634158, 0191788104, 0198717520 instant download after payment.

John Henry Newman is often described as "the Father of the Second Vatican Council." He anticipated most of the Council's major documents, as well as being an inspiration to the theologians who were behind them. His writings offer an illuminating commentary both on the teachings of the Council and the way these have been implemented and interpreted in the post-conciliar period. This book is the first sustained attempt to consider what Newman's reaction to Vatican II would have been. As a theologian who on his own admission fought throughout his life against theological liberalism, yet who pioneered many of the themes of the Council in his own day, Newman is best described as a conservative radical who cannot be classed simply as either a conservative or liberal Catholic. At the time of the First Vatican Council, Newman adumbrated in his private letters a mini-theology of Councils, which casts much light on Vatican II and its aftermath.
The leading Newman scholar, Ian Ker, argues that Newman would have greatly welcomed the reforms of the Council, but would have seen them in the light of his theory of doctrinal development, insisting that they must certainly be understood as changes but changes in continuity rather than discontinuity with the Church's tradition and past teachings. He would therefore have endorsed the so-called 'hermeneutic of reform in continuity' in regard to Vatican II, a hermeneutic first formulated by Pope Benedict XVI and subsequently confirmed by his successor, Pope Francis, and rejected both 'progressive' and ultra-conservative interpretations of the Council as a revolutionary event. Newman believed that what Councils fail to speak of is of great importance, and so a final chapter considers the kind of evangelization--a topic notably absent from the documents of Vatican II--Newman thought appropriate in the face of secularization.

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