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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... realities . This is why all liturgy prefers to use the most basic — one might almost say the most biological — gestures , those in which human beings reveal the deepest needs of their nature and disclose the innermost dynamic of their ...
... realities or values that in themselves are alien to that field . In other words , the liturgy , being the action of ... reality that human action by itself cannot apprehend . The properly liturgical value of a rite or text is a function ...
... reality or , more accurately , as being something more and other than it appears to be . It is this material density ... reality used is necessarily deficient in relation to the transcendent reality it symbolizes ; in many instances ...
... realities that transcend them . Acknowledgment of an objectively transcendent being and its unlimited moral perfection implies a new characteristic of the object , namely , holiness . This value was gradually made known through biblical ...
... reality : the human level with its coherent secular di- mensions , and the level proper to holiness of a personal God who is clearly untouched by all the ambiguities inherent in the " sacred , " but who also , without losing anything of ...