Primary Sources of Liturgical Theology: A ReaderDwight Vogel Liturgical Press, 2000 - 317 páginas The voices of liturgical theology in the twentieth century are many and varied. Primary Sources of Liturgical Theology brings together in one volume the representative writings of scholars throughout the Euro-North American context whose insights have shaped our understanding of liturgy today. The selections in Primary Sources of Liturgical Theology are arranged around nine seminal questions which students of liturgical theology need to engage. Each selection is introduced and contextualized by another liturgical theologian. Through this first-hand encounter with primary sources readers will develop a sense of the broad range of writings available to them. Chapters are What Is Liturgical Theology?" "What Is Liturgy?" "How Can We 'Do' Liturgical Theology?" "How Are Theology and Liturgy Related?" "How Does Liturgy Embody Theological Themes?" "What Is the Theological Function of Liturgical Language and Ritual?" "What Is the Role of the Word in Liturgy?" "How Do Liturgical Theologians Engage Cultural Diversity?" "How Are Liturgy and Life Related?" Includes an alphabetical list of primary contributors and a chronological index of major entries by date of original publication. Contributors to Primary Sources of Liturgical Theology are Peter Brunner; Odo Casel, O.S.B.; Louis-Marie Chauvet; Anscar J. Chupungco, O.S.B.; Mary Collins, O.S.B.;Irenee Henri Dalmais, O.P.; Ruth C. Duck; Justo L. Gonzalez; Romano Guardini; Angelus A. Häussling, O.S.B.; Mary Catherine Hilkert, O.P.; Lawrence A. Hoffman; Paul Waitman Hoon; Aidan Kavanagh, O.S.B.; Edward J. Kilmartin, S.J.; Gordon W. Lathrop; L. Edward Phillips; David N. Power, O.M.I.; Gail Ramshaw; Don E. Saliers; Alexander Schmemann; Robert F. Taft, S.J.; Harold Dean Trulear; Evelyn Underhill; Dwight W. Vogel; Jean Jacques von Allmen; Geoffrey Wainwright; and Joyce Ann Zimmerman, C.PP.S. Dwight W. Vogel is professor of theology and ministry and dean of the chapel at Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary where he coordinates the doctoral program in liturgical studies. |
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... called " liturgical theology " can be examined as a geogra- phy of the landscape of a certain kind of human activity . Some litur- gical theologians focus their attention on one part of the landscape , some on another . Some use ...
... called theologia prima . " 19 The immediacy of the liturgy as theological act often escapes our no- tice . It is the nature of primary experience not to be concerned with naming or labeling itself . Yet we are aware that in our ...
... called " theol- ogy in liturgy . " Some call that province " theology from liturgy " with justification.29 I have resisted using that terminology , since the province of " theology because liturgy " ( or " doxological theology , " as it ...
... called " cultic . " As used originally in the Greek cities , " liturgy " could mean any " public service , " but espe- cially services that were costly and were accepted as done in the name of the city because they were linked to its ...
... called life , and mother of the living . She signified a great good thing , before the great woe of sin . And the second Adam fell asleep here on the Cross , with head bowed , so that his spouse might be formed from what flowed out of ...