1,607 research outputs found
2015 Baccalaureate Mass Homily
Homily delivered at the 2015 Baccalaureate Mass as part of the 169th Commencement of the College of the Holy Cross.
The homilist, Rev. Paul Harman, S.J., is the Vice President for Mission at the College of the Holy Cross.https://crossworks.holycross.edu/bacc_homily/1002/thumbnail.jp
A Model for Dialogue: Cyprian of Carthage on Ecclesial Discernment
To provide theological support for the Common Ground Initiative, the author explores an ancient practice, active participation by the faithful in the process of ecclesial discernment. Cyprian of Carthage consulted broadly and sought communal consensus on such matters as the election of bishops, the readmission of the lapsed, and the deposition of unworthy bishops. Such consultation was considered an essential element in the Church\u27s own fidelity to God
Introduction: Improbable Encounters?
In this essay, the theological response to the question is an ecclesiological one: there are degrees of membership in the Church, from the explicitness of baptism to a nonofficial or anonymous form of Christianity. Rahner arrives at this position by starting with what can be said of the human being as spirit, that is, unlimited openness to the being of God, a capacity for God, an innate tendency toward God. In turn, the Incarnation, where God enters into human reality and becomes human being, reveals the fundamental ordering of God toward the human person (a subject in an interpersonal, intersubjective historical situation). Explicit Christian faith, which is expressed within the interpersonal communion of the Church, expresses what is always and already an implicit experience among human beings qua human. So, if a human being who does not explicitly profess Christian faith nevertheless says yes to her life in relation to the horizon of grace that we call God, then that person could be called a Christian, albeit anonymously, even though that person is not an explicit member of the Church. Such was the state of the question when Rahner was looking at it in the late 1950s and mid -1960s: a matter of ecclesiology, membership in the Church through the radical acceptance of God\u27s grace in a human life in a mode that is intrinsically Christian
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