Presents a translation which deals with the nature of the Church and the liturgy, which is seminally influenced by the Liturgical Movement. This book opens an initial exploration of the Church as made by the Eucharist and gives expression to that mystery in which the Church is believed to consist.[...]
French Jesuit Henri de Lubac (1896 1991) was arguably the most revolutionary yet under-acknowledged theologian of the twentieth century. He proposed that Western theology since the early modern period had lost sight of the key to integrating faith and reason -- namely, the truth that all human being[...]
This book focuses on a historical analysis of hte genesis of the idea of pure nature, which arose in reaction to the distorted Augustinianism of nominalist theologians at the end ot the Middle Ages.[...]
A presentation of the main themes of de Lubrac's monumental study where he demonstrates that all forms of scriptural exegesis are part of the ongoing reflective life of God and the process by which the human race learns to share its mystery.[...]