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Von Balthasar Research Articles

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Overview
535 Articles

Published in last 50 years

Related Topics

  • Trinitarian Theology
  • Trinitarian Theology
  • Christian Theology
  • Christian Theology
  • Sacramental Theology
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Articles published on Von Balthasar

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Holy Desire or Wholly Hubris? Deification in the Theology of Hans Urs von Balthasar

The theology of deification in the Christian tradition is fraught with misconceptions. Although it embodies the core teaching of the faith, it is not only a neglected theme of theology, but often critiqued as a Promethean distortion of the gospel and/or a semi-Pelagian heterodoxy. Hans Urs von Balthasar, through his examination of the teachings of the early Church Fathers, presents the doctrine in its Christocentric context, emphasizing its kenotic and inherently relational character. Deification is thus revealed as an antidote to the narrowly conceived notion of “justification” as salvation, which is rooted in a juridic understanding of God’s grace. Conceived as the dynamic incorporation of the believer into the life of Christ himself, deification is rightly understood as a present, existential process and thus far more than a mere eschatological hope.

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  • Journal IconReligions
  • Publication Date IconJun 24, 2025
  • Author Icon Sigurd Lefsrud
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Ignatian Obedience and Evangelization: Jesuit General Congregations and Hans Urs von Balthasar

This article explores the relationship between Ignatian obedience and evangelization through the complementary perspectives of Hans Urs von Balthasar and recent Jesuit General Congregations. It argues that obedience, traditionally viewed as submission to authority, must be reinterpreted as a joyful and loving response to God’s mission, deeply rooted in the trinitarian life. Drawing from Ignatius of Loyola’s foundational texts and the evolving understanding of mission post-Vatican II, this essay highlights a shift from private, intellectual obedience to a more communal and justice-oriented service. The theological depth provided by von Balthasar’s trinitarian model is presented alongside the practical emphasis on social justice and dialogue found in contemporary Jesuit praxis and Pope Francis’ integral ecology. This paper ultimately proposes a synthesis of contemplative fidelity and active engagement, positioning obedience as a vital force in credible, mission-driven evangelization.

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  • Journal IconReligions
  • Publication Date IconJun 19, 2025
  • Author Icon Endika Martínez
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Daring After Hart: Lonergan, Blondel, and Balthasar on the Problem of Human Freedom

This article reconsiders the problem of human freedom in the wake of David Bentley Hart’s That All Shall Be Saved . It renews and reasserts the crisis of every human freedom’s eternal destiny. With insights from Maurice Blondel, Bernard Lonergan, and Hans Urs von Balthasar, the article makes a case for distinctive conceptions of human freedom, divine agency, and the problem of hell. The article closes by reading Theo-Drama as a map marking places for further theological exploration.

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  • Journal IconTheological Studies
  • Publication Date IconMay 30, 2025
  • Author Icon Anne M Carpenter
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Shin Young Park, From Abyss to Glory: Hans Urs von Balthasar on Faith, the Self, and Kenosis as a Response to Postmodern Nihilism

Shin Young Park, From Abyss to Glory: Hans Urs von Balthasar on Faith, the Self, and Kenosis as a Response to Postmodern Nihilism

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  • Journal IconTheological Reflections: Eastern European Journal of Theology
  • Publication Date IconMay 26, 2025
  • Author Icon Andrii Shymanovych
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Przywara on Christ as the Fullness of Creation: The Analogia Entis in the Chalcedonian Formula, Recapitulation, and the Admirabile Commercium

Abstract This article studies how Erich Przywara presents Christ as the fullness of creation by bringing the conceptuality of the analogia entis to bear on three classic Christological theologoumena: the Chalcedonian formula, recapitulation, and the admirabile commercium. It also argues that Przywara's Christology, when understood in its full sweep, has resources to handle the criticisms of both Karl Barth and Hans Urs von Balthasar. His neglected treatment of the admirabile commercium holds particular ecumenical promise.

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  • Journal IconModern Theology
  • Publication Date IconMay 5, 2025
  • Author Icon Aaron Pidel Sj
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Hindu Avatāra and Christian Kenosis: A New Approach in Comparative Theology1

Abstract Within comparative theology, the Hindu doctrine of avatāra has traditionally been compared to the Christian doctrine of the incarnation, both of which are expressions of divine embodiment in creaturely form. This article, however, contrasts the doctrine of avatāra with a reading of the incarnation that frames the latter within the broader context of kenoticism developed primarily in modern Christian theology. I argue that this approach (a) alleviates some of the difficulties encountered by the traditional comparison of avatāra with the incarnation and (b) highlights some noteworthy but easily missed dimensions present in the doctrines of both faith traditions. This is established through a comparison of two stories of young Kṛṣṇa and their display of divine play, līlā, with Hans Urs von Balthasar's kenotic reading of both the intratrinitarian relations and the metaphysical structure of finite beings. In this way, the article, on the one hand, alleviates the discrepancies about the number of divine descents and the link between these and the world's creation and metaphysical constitution, and, on the other hand, highlights how the Hindu notion of līlā and Christian kenotic readings intend to express the dialectic of divine sovereignty and accessibility in a philosophically and theologically responsible way.

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  • Journal IconThe Heythrop Journal
  • Publication Date IconMay 1, 2025
  • Author Icon Christian J Ivandić
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Socrates as a Religious Figure Within a Christian Framework: Socratic Irony and the Quest for Truth in Søren Kierkegaard and Hans Urs von Balthasar

Instead of examining Socrates and his philosophy within the realm of philosophy, this study engages with the works of two theologians—Søren Kierkegaard and Hans Urs von Balthasar—to explore the person of Socrates and his philosophical concerns. The article approaches this exploration through conceptual pairs: for example, Socratic irony is analysed in terms of whether it is a serious or unserious matter. Further, the study investigates whether Socrates’s death was a tragic event or meaningless regarding each theological framework. Then the study turns to the notion of salvation history, probing whether Socrates’s death is a prefiguration of Christ’s death, or whether it fails to have any symbolic or historical relation.

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  • Journal IconIrish Theological Quarterly
  • Publication Date IconApr 12, 2025
  • Author Icon Florian Klug
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Ethics Beyond Being?: Human Dignity and the Ontology of the Good in Twentieth-Century Catholic Thought

The terrors of the twentieth century left those who still believed in man’s capacity for the Good seeking new approaches. Martin Heidegger’s anti-metaphysical critique had called into question the systems of the past. In Poland, where these crises were felt acutely by a profoundly Catholic society, two thinkers can serve as a case study that helps give insight into the rebuilding of an ethical society and system of thought from within, namely, Jozef Tischner and Karol Wojtyła (John Paul II). Regarding the crucial question of human dignity, Tischner follows Emmanuel Levinas, who seems to have accepted Martin Heidegger’s anti-metaphysical critique, to a conception of goodness “beyond being” by which being becomes the enemy of goodness. This position is contrasted with that of John Paul II and others—such as Hans Urs von Balthasar, Robert Spaemann, and D. C. Schindler—who adhere to the comprehension of being and goodness as coextensive and bring it into the twenty-first century. While numerous points of contact exist, the contrast between Tischner and John Paul II is one of alternate priorities—phenomenology or metaphysics, respectively—which results in two different trajectories for comprehending ethics, encounter, solidarity, and the Good. While Tischner’s openness to dialogue with his contemporary world is laudable and necessary, John Paul II’s insistence on the ontological grounding of the Good is indispensable.

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  • Journal IconReligions
  • Publication Date IconFeb 9, 2025
  • Author Icon Michael Dominic Taylor
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A Contemporary View on the Immanent and Economic Aspects of Selected Trinitarian Terminology of the Creed

The article examines the immanent and economic aspects of selected Trinitarian terminology of the Creed. The analysis is focused on six expressions arranged in three groups. The first concerns the omnipotence of God the Father, the “almighty” (παντοκράτωρ) “creator” (ποιητής). The second regards the incarnation of the Son of God “the only begotten” (μονογενής), who “took flesh” (σαρκωθέντα) and “was made man” (ἐνανθρωπήσαντα). The third considers the action of the Holy Spirit “the giver of live” (ζωοποιός). The novelty of this approach consists in re-reading of the ancient conciliar texts in the context of the overall development of Christian reflection with a special emphasis on contemporary dogmatic thought (mainly of H. de Lubac and H. U. von Balthasar). The main results include: a clear distinction between immanent almightiness and economic creative omnipotence of God the Father (section 1), a deeper understanding of the correspondence between Christological and Mariological aspects of the mystery of incarnation (section 2) and a new perspective on immanent dimension of the characteristics of the Holy Spirit as the giver of life (section 3).

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  • Journal IconRoczniki Teologiczne
  • Publication Date IconDec 31, 2024
  • Author Icon Lech Wołowski
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Analogy Between Theory and Praxis: Hans Urs von Balthasar’s Trinitarian Obedience

This essay presents four different steps that we can follow to establish an analogical connection between the Christian praxis and the Trinitarian immanent life. To illustrate these steps, we have provided a case study of Hans Urs von Balthasar’s treatment of obedience. Obedience is employed analogically to speak of the Trinitarian life of God and of the Christian life, by means of grounding this concept in the personhood of Christ, to be more precise, in his mission. In other words, the Christian obedience becomes a participation in the eternal Trinitarian love between the persons. Balthasar’s treatment of this subject illustrates an example whereby a theory–practice split is overcome with the employment of analogy in systematic theology.

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  • Journal IconReligions
  • Publication Date IconDec 9, 2024
  • Author Icon Endika Martínez
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Struck by the Arrow of Beauty: Saturated Phenomena and the (Theo)Drama of Subjectivity

ABSTRACT This article is concerned with theological aesthetics and aims to show how aesthetic modes of experience create a context in which a subject can understand their existence in terms of (Christian) spiritual drama. It considers the ideas of twentieth-century Catholic theologian Hans Urs von Balthasar and of contemporary phenomenologist Jean-Luc Marion in order to show how aesthetic experience acts as a gateway through which the experiencing subject enters into a new, dramatically constituted spiritual space. Finally, this article illustrates this conception of a dramatized spiritual life by considering the writings of Saint Thérèse of Lisieux. Saint Thérèse, the author argues, models how a life that is otherwise obscure and “undramatic” may be “lifted” into the dramatic mode through experiences of faith as filtered through what Marion calls “saturated phenomena.”

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  • Journal IconEcumenica
  • Publication Date IconOct 28, 2024
  • Author Icon Cormac Power
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The Eucharistic Form of God: Trinity, Incarnation, and Sacrament in the Theology of Hans Urs von Balthasar by Jonathan Martin Ciraulo (review)

The Eucharistic Form of God: Trinity, Incarnation, and Sacrament in the Theology of Hans Urs von Balthasar by Jonathan Martin Ciraulo (review)

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  • Journal IconThe Thomist: A Speculative Quarterly Review
  • Publication Date IconOct 1, 2024
  • Author Icon Nicholas J Healy
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"Discernment of Spirits" in the theology of Hans Urs von Balthasar and the "The Synodal Way" project in Germany

„Die Unterscheidung der Geister“ klingt für zeitgenössische Ohren anachronistisch und wird mit Exorzismen, Okkultismus oder anderen unklaren Praktiken in Verbindung gebracht. Selten denkt jemand an die Gemeinschaft von Qumran, den heiligen Paulus, Origenes oder die Wüstenväter, obwohl man dort bereits eine gründliche Bearbeitung dieses Themas finden kann. Noch seltener kommt jemand auf moderne Philosophie oder Psychologie, obwohl gerade dort eine weitere Entwicklung der angesprochenen Fragen zu finden ist. Die Unterscheidung der Geister hat eine lange, faszinierende Geschichte und deckt sich mit den Ereignissen des menschlichen Geistes. Darüber hinaus dauert der Kampf der Geister — ob wir es wollen oder nicht — weiter an, und jedes weitere menschliche Dasein wird zu ihrem Schlachtfeld. Das letzte Wort in dieser Angelegenheit ist noch nicht gesprochen. Daher ist die Rückkehr zur Theologie der „Unterscheidung der Geister“ bei Hans Urs Balthasar, die auf den geistlichen Übungen des heiligen Ignatius von Loyola basiert, die in diesem Artikel vorgestellt werden, von Interesse. Die Rolle dieses Artikels ist dankbarerweise weniger auf die Systematik und Disziplin des Unterrichts ausgerichtet, sondern betont die Praktikabilität und Nützlichkeit der präsentierten Realität, insbesondere bei der „Unterscheidung der Geister“ im Rahmen des Synodalen Weges in Deutschland.

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  • Journal IconPolonia Sacra
  • Publication Date IconSep 30, 2024
  • Author Icon Przemysław Kocjan
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Circles and the Cross: Cosmos, Consciousness, Christ, and the Human Place in Creation

CIRCLES AND THE CROSS: Cosmos, Consciousness, Christ, and the Human Place in Creation by Loren Wilkinson. Eugene, OR: Cascade Books, 2023. xvii + 354 pages. Paperback; $36.00. ISBN: 9781666746341. *This book invites the reader to share a great-hearted and generous journey through some profoundly important territory. I take its aim to be to show both how humanity has arrived at the distorted and potentially disastrous relationship we have with the non-human creation, and that Christian thought, framed through an emphasis on creation, incarnation, kenosis, and resurrection can form the basis for a just form of earthkeeping which is also a sharing in the new creation. *In Part I Wilkinson identifies consciousness as the great mystery to be puzzled over, together with the fact of the existence of the cosmos. Part II reviews different aspects of the practice of science--its pleasures, paradoxes, and pains. Part III traces tensions and ambiguities in how science has evolved through the Enlightenment and its interaction with Romanticism, then how that interaction gave rise to the environmental movement, paving the way for various forms of new religion, especially variants of pantheism. Part IV then takes up the theological task, emphasizing incarnation and kenosis. In a concluding Part V, Wilkinson stresses the importance of resurrection and new creation in shaping the Christian story and understanding the human vocation. *The book, then, makes a huge journey. It is the fruit of painstaking research and long reflection. But it is written in such an engaging style that the reader's attention need never flag. The journey is, moreover, leavened with personal reminiscences which show how grounded the author is in his own place (the Pacific Northwest), and how passionately involved he has been in the journey, taking with him many generations of students and conversation partners. It was, for instance, a delight to read that he had held dialogue with E. O. Wilson, whose reductionist views differed so radically from the author's own. *Wilkinson begins from reflections on circles, with their association with cyclic time and rhythms of being, from which there is no escape, and the Cross as a decisive interruption of time. He writes fascinatingly about the design of the Celtic cross, and notes how recent religious longings have wanted to recapture a sense of the rhythms of the earth. Arguably, the linearity of the Christian narrative, and its eschatological drive, make this recapture harder. I would like to have seen this circle-cross motif developed further, but it seemed to get rather lost as the book evolved. *The author's two great allies make a fascinating pair. The first is Iain McGilchrist, whose book The Master and His Emissary provides an increasingly influential model of how the two hemispheres of the brain operate differently, the left toward reductive problem-solving, the right toward wonder, imagination, and empathy. The second is the poet Gerard Manley Hopkins (with Wilkinson's knowledge of Romantic poets adding significantly to his analysis). *The author's conclusion will be congenial to most readers of this journal. Some of his history of science will be very familiar ground. I found the tracing of the voluntarism that catalyzed scientific enquiry back to Scotus and William of Ockham fascinating, though it must be of concern that neither of those premier historians of the rise of science, John Hedley Brooke and Peter Harrison, feature in the bibliography. And I felt that there was significant sleight-of-hand in simply associating the Enlightenment with reductive understandings of human beings and the world. *Theologically, Wilkinson's dominant motif is kenosis, which he maps back from Philippians 2 all the way into the heart of the Trinity (following von Balthasar), and forward into the necessary costs to some creatures that enable other creatures to flourish (following Holmes Rolston). I have criticized Rolston for invoking kenosis in the latter respect, since it seems to me to confuse voluntary self-giving with creatures' instinctive survival at the expense of others. Perhaps one of Wilkinson's ex- amples, the Pacific salmon returning upriver to spawn, will make me start to think again. But neither Rolston nor Wilkinson clarify why it is that creation must be so costly to creatures and to God--it seems this is just the pattern that triune creation has to follow. *Wilkinson is very much influenced by the collection of essays The Work of Love: Creation as Kenosis edited by John Polkinghorne; I too love that book, but it is important to take note of the criticisms of kenosis, both from classical systematics and from feminism, offered by Sarah Coakley in the concluding essay. Karen Kilby's recent work is a significant sequel to this critique; however, a more comprehensive treatment is needed to address this. *The innovative theology of the book is developed in a fascinating section at the end of Part IV. Wilkinson moves us up a gear with his invocation of Heidegger's Gelassenheit, "releasement," or "letting be." It was a disappointment that Loren did not interact with Ruth Page's use of that term in God and the Web of Creation, but what he goes on to do is very striking. He uses Hopkins's terminology of "selving" from the sonnet "As Kingfishers Catch Fire" to develop the idea of transitive and intransitive selving. Creatures in general "selve" intransitively--to return to the poem, they "fling out" that "What I do is me, for that I came." But God, through what Hopkins called "the great sacrifice," selves transitively in a ceaseless and costly letting be. So far, so good, but then there is a yet bolder step, in suggesting that humans too are called to transitive selving. When our "gifts of reason, creativity, and imagination are directed to other creatures--not in order to use them, but to know, name and enhance their true selves ... human selving can echo God's selving" (p. 299). This is (using the sestet of the same poem) the selving activity of "the just man" who "justices," using humans' unique gifts to nourish the selves of other creatures, and becomes "in God's eye ... Christ," as Hopkins has it. (This extraordinary theological claim could be justified by appeal to the idea that the human being perfectly "justicing" is acting as the authentic image of God in the world. The Pauline letters identify Christ as this image [Col. 1:15, 2 Cor. 4:4]. So, the process by which humans can be "conformed to the image of [God's] Son" [Rom. 8:29] and be "transformed into the same image" [2 Cor. 3:18] is seen as complete in the justicing human. But Wilkinson does not offer this groundwork--he is content to work from the poem itself.) *Here I would suggest that Heidegger's term Gelassenheit is very helpful, because it addresses the vital question of what it is that humans can do for the non-human creation. We can let it be, in ways that draw on all our gifts, very much including the scientific, and all our virtues--vitally those of wonder, love and hope. This hope is underpinned by resurrection, as Wilkinson goes on to conclude. I found this formulation both original and compelling. It begs many questions, but I hope it will stimulate much thought, as such a rich offering deserves to do. *There were occasional errors--for instance, Laplace should be "Pierre-Simon" not "Simon"--but the book is attractively presented and well indexed. It will introduce the general Christian reader to an intriguing vein of reflection on our place in creation and new creation, and students to important aspects of the science-religion debate. The ecotheologian will find plenty to chew on in Part IV. Above all, I am left with the sense of a profound gift generously given, by which we are all left in Loren Wilkinson's debt. *Reviewed by Christopher Southgate, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK EX4 4RJ.

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  • Journal IconPerspectives on Science and Christian Faith
  • Publication Date IconSep 1, 2024
  • Author Icon Loren Wilkinson
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Volitional imagining and religious dramatizing

ABSTRACT Prompted and resolved by acts of volitional imagining, dramatizing figures a situation in which actors share in having something important at stake such that imminently some of their actions will be momentous (making great differences) and fateful (defining of lives). Religious dramatizing does this very ambitiously. In amplifying the stakes of action there is a danger of being inappropriately dramatic, as in Don Quixote’s fantasies or Chicken Little’s ‘The sky is falling!’ But dramatization can be validated by successfully enacting the dramatic heightening of a situation, by conventionally instituting heights of importance, and by having convincing experiences of situations as dramatic. Kant worries about an inappropriately romantic dramatizing of the moral life; Lucretius warns that religious visionaries will make people crazy with fear of divine retribution. The issue is taken seriously within religious dramatizing. For example, apocalypticism seems to entail an irresponsible termination of care for continuing life. Correctives are offered by Hans Urs von Balthasar’s theory of ‘theo-drama’ and (Francis’s, 2015) encyclical ‘On Care for Our Common Home’. These examples show how the modulation of dramatizing is no less a religious concern than the dramatic heightening of human life.

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  • Journal IconInternational Journal of Philosophy and Theology
  • Publication Date IconAug 7, 2024
  • Author Icon Steven G Smith
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The vein of gold. In search of a methodological renewal of dogmatics based on the reading of Lech Wołowski’s book entitled “The problematics of paradox in the thought of Henri de Lubac and Hans Urs von Balthasar”

This study is presented in the form of a research-review article and consists of reflections informed by a reading of Lech Wołowski’s monograph “The Problematics of Paradox in the Thought of Henri de Lubac and Hans Urs von Balthasar”, while simultaneously drawing from other works by the same researcher. The aim of this article is to present the paradox method as a means to deepen theological research. This method is portrayed as a proposition that can be applied in theological research, much like in other scientific domains. This approach may contribute to addressing the contemporary crisis in dogmatics and serve in formulating responses to current “profound” questions posed by individuals and society.

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  • Journal IconPolonia Sacra
  • Publication Date IconJun 4, 2024
  • Author Icon Cezary Smuniewski
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Is There an End to the Theatrical Play? Hans Urs von Balthasar’s Understanding of the Beatific Vision in Relation to the Theo-Drama

Hans Urs von Balthasar’s teaching on the beatific vision has been drawing scholarly attention. By building upon the works of Thomas Dalzell, Aidan Nichols, and Anne Carpenter, I advance the discussion by demonstrating that the dramatic and artistic-poetic grounding of Balthasar’s theo-drama shapes the way he understands the beatific vision. In his later work, Balthasar transposes the Catholic understanding of the beatific vision according to the art form and logic of drama. Specifically, using the notions of the visio immediata Dei and the visio mortis, he transposes the meaning of the beatific vision such that the divine essence is understood as a union of love in conversation with the Thomistic perspective of an immediate knowledge of God.

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  • Journal IconTheological Studies
  • Publication Date IconMay 28, 2024
  • Author Icon Li-Wei Liu
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Новые книги

The collective material of the employees of RAS Institute of Philosophy (A. Vakulinskaya, K. Vorozhikhina, A. Kuksyuk, A. Makarova, V. Sidorin) describes the book novelties of 2023 related to topics of Russian philosophy. Brief summaries present the main content of the books - thus, the reader is able to get acquainted with the most important and interesting publications, including: “Civilization: The Polyphony of Meanings. Memoria”; “Solowjew” by H. U. von Balthasar; “We will be Faces/Persons… An Analytical-Synthetic Reading of Dostoevsky’s Works" by T. Kasatkina; Volume 7 of E. Ilyenkov's Collected Works ; Volume 5 of S. Frank's Collected Works; “My Zinoviev” by A. Guseinov; “Nikolai Berdyaev: an Epistolary Conversation. Archival Materials” ed. By T. Shchedrina; collective monograph "Sergei Nikolaevich Trubetskoy”; “Eurasianism: Logos. Eidos. Symbol. Myth” by R. Vakhitov; Anthology “The Сement and Body of Russian Socialism”.

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  • Journal IconOtechestvennaya Filosofiya
  • Publication Date IconMay 1, 2024
  • Author Icon Alexandra Vakulinskaya + 4
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A Pied Theological Cosmology: Alejandro García-Rivera’s Gift to Science

The work of the late Alejandro García-Rivera has been overlooked as a contribution to theological engagement with science. A significant obstacle to appreciating it as such is the view that his theological cosmology marks a problematic shift from Latinx theological aesthetics to an uncritical engagement with the work of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin. This article engages his oeuvre in response to that critique. Using Hans Urs von Balthasar’s concept of “theo-drama,” it argues that García-Rivera not only fits Teilhard into the broader mosaic of his work successfully, but that García-Rivera’s final work illumines his whole oeuvre as a “gift to science.” It shows how García-Rivera adapts his account of the beauty in the “little stories” of the pueblo to little places in the natural world, in order to help us see their beauty as an objective reality calling us to participate in their care. Thus, the article portrays García-Rivera’s body of work as a way to engage the scientifically-minded through a sensibility for natural beauty, born of mestizaje, popular piety, and the cross.

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  • Journal IconHorizons
  • Publication Date IconApr 17, 2024
  • Author Icon Matthew J Gummess
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Book Review: Hans Urs von Balthasar’s Theology of Representation: God, Drama, and Salvation by Jacob Lett

Book Review: <i>Hans Urs von Balthasar’s Theology of Representation: God, Drama, and Salvation</i> by Jacob Lett

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  • Journal IconStudies in Christian Ethics
  • Publication Date IconApr 12, 2024
  • Author Icon Guido De Graaff
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