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New horizon: theological essays

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152
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~2h 32min
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English
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Published 1972 Paulist Press 4 views
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About Author

Gregory Baum

Gerhard Albert Baum (June 20, 1923 – October 18, 2017), better known as Gregory Baum, was a German-born Canadian priest and theologian in the Catholic Church. He became known in North America and Europe in the 1960s for his work on ecumenism, interfaith dialogue, and the relationship between the Catholic Church and Jews. In the later 1960s, he went to the New School for Social Theory in New York and became a sociologist, which led to his work on creating a dialogue between classical sociology (Marx, Tocqueville, Durkheim, Toennies, Weber, etc.) and Christian theology. In the 1970s, he welcomed the insights of the Theology of Liberation that came from Latin America and other societies. He also became interested in the work of Karl Mannheim and developed a program of ideology critique that he hoped would eliminate the ideological or prejudicial elements in religion.

Description

Since the Second Vatican Council, the Catholic Church has experienced the birth of a new humanism which defines man primarily in the light of his responsibilities -- responsibilities toward his fellowmen and toward history. This, says the author, is the new horizon which the Catholic theologian faces today. The essays in this book demonstrate how the challenge is being met, and how it will be met in coming years. They consider topics such as infallibility, the Bible, the direction and structure of theology, prayer, world religions, and the developing theological consensus.

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