Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Die Freiheit der Gnade / Das Paradox des Menschen | Lubac, Henri de, Balthasar, Hans Urs von | ISBN: 9783894111649 | Kostenloser Versand für alle Bücher mit Versand und Verkauf duch Amazon.

  2. According to de Lubac, a theological hermeneutics of human existence receives its contemporary urgency from the church’s confrontation with modern atheism. The exigency of the church’s apologetics is not, of course, a distinctly modern phenomenon. The church’s beliefs have never ceased to elicit opposition, and every age witnesses “the ...

  3. 8. Juni 2021 · El Padre Provincial de las Antillas, Martin Lenk SJ, nos explica quien es de Lubac, su historia, su aporte a la Teología contemporánea y su trabajo en el Con...

    • 85 Min.
    • 3,4K
    • Instituto Jesuita Pedro Arrupe
  4. The French Jesuit theologian Henri de Lubac (1896-1991) is one of the most significant Catholic theologians of the twentieth century, a central figure in the broad intellectual and evangelical ressourcement movement and the nouvelle théologie movement, which involved a “return to the sources” of Christian faith, inspiring a revival in the Catholic Church leading up to Vatican II.

  5. www.johannes-verlag.de › 3693Henri de Lubac

    Auf den ersten Blick mag es überraschen, daß Henri de Lubac, der von 1959 bis 1964 mit seinem vierbändigen Werk Exégèse médiévale die Geschichte der christlichen Bibelhermeneutik umfassend dargestellt hatte, nicht etwa die entsprechenden Artikel über die Schriftdeutung (Dei Verbum 12 oder 15/16) kommentierte, sondern das Vorwort und das Erste Kapitel, wo es um das Verständnis von ...

  6. 4. Sept. 2014 · In the thought, vision, courage, ecclesial love and humanity of Henri de Lubac, we can always find a resource to help us with this vocation. For a perceptive introductory discussion and description of de Lubac’s thought, see Hans Urs Von Balthasar, The Theology of Henri de Lubac (Communio Books: Ignatius Press, 1991) Fr James Hanvey SJ

  7. 4. Jan. 2021 · This is a question that Henri de Lubac (1896–1991) asked in anticipation of the opening of the Second Vatican Council (1962–1965). It is a question that remains apropos today nearly 60 years after the Council as historians and theologians consider the legacy of Vatican II and what it means for the Roman Catholic Church today.