What Is and What Ought to Be: The Dialectic of Experience, Theology, and Church

What Is and What Ought to Be: The Dialectic of Experience, Theology, and Church

by Michael G. Lawler
What Is and What Ought to Be: The Dialectic of Experience, Theology, and Church

What Is and What Ought to Be: The Dialectic of Experience, Theology, and Church

by Michael G. Lawler

Paperback

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Overview

The genesis of this book was sown in 1961 in a seminar on theological method under the guidance of Bernard Lonergan. Lonergan was convinced that something new was happening in history, and that a living theology required a new theological approach.
In this book, Michael Lawler is concerned with three characteristics of this new approach: that theology must be historical, empirical, and in interdisciplinary collaboration with the social sciences. The book thus explores the relationship between practical theology (which is concerned with the church as it is and as it ought to be) and sociology, and specifically the theological realities of sensus fidei and reception. The exploration is concretized by a consideration of the sociological data and theology of two Catholic moral doctrines: artificial contraception and divorce and remarriage without prior annulment.
In addition to being a useful primer on the relationship between theology and sociology (both theoretical and empirical), the book provides a wonderfully clear description of the sea-changes that have occurred in Roman Catholic theology worldwide over the past 70 or so years. Among those elements are the turn to the subject; the sociology of knowledge; the distinctions between uncreated and created grace and between original and dependent revelation; a complex, non-fundamentalist understanding of Sacred Scripture; the preferential option for the poor; the notion of the church as communion rather than hierarchy; and, finally, the necessity for church teaching to be "received," accepted, by the whole church. If a Catholic Rip Van Winkle had fallen asleep 40 or 50 years ago, he would read this book, upon opening his eyes, with amazement.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780826417046
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 04/05/2005
Pages: 224
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.47(d)

About the Author

Michael G. Lawler is the Amelia and Emil Graff Professor of Catholic Theological Studies and Director of the Center for Marriage and Family Life at Creighton University. He is the author of 19 books and 120 articles. His most noted book is Symbol and Sacrament: A Contemporary Sacramental Theology. His most recent book is Marriage and the Catholic Church: Disputed Questions.

Table of Contents

Contents1. Theology, Sociology, and Theologians2. Theology and Sociology: Mutual Mediations3. Sociology of Knowledge and Theology4. Theology, Sociology, and Scripture5. The Church Emerging in the Human Community6. Reception and Sensus Fidei7. Sociology, Divorce and Remarriage, Contraception

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