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The Institute of Catholic Studies Fall Courses 2020
The Institute of Catholic Studies Fall Courses 2020 1 The Aim of the Catholic Studies Program The mission of the Institute of Catholic Studies is to provide students, faculty, and the larger community with the opportunity to deepen their knowledge of how Catholicism and Catholics have interacted with the world, both shaping and being shaped by culture and society in the past and in the present. As Catholic and Jesuit, John Carroll University is an ideal home for such an undertaking. Through an interdisciplinary Catholic Studies Program, the Institute provides opportunities for encounter with and formation in the Catholic intellectual tradition as expressed in many scholarly disciplines from philosophy to science. It offers courses and public events that highlight the contributions of Catholic intellectuals and scholars that explore the current conditions in which Catholics find themselves in the first decade of the twenty-first century. By these undertakings the Institute offers students a solid interdisciplinary foundation for understanding the interaction of faith and culture in the past as well as for navigating their way in the future. 2 Catholic Studies Courses Fall Courses 2020 HS 218: Saints and Scoundrels: The Jesuits from Renaissance to Revolution (ISJ) Dr. Paul Murphy (MWF 9:00-9:50am) Will examine the Society of Jesus, one of the most prominent, notorious, talented, and despised groups in the modern world. We will seek to clarify the historical and cultural significance of the Society of Jesus, the largest religious order in -
Pagans, Princes, Priests: the Conversion of the Anglo-Saxons | University of Glasgow
09/30/21 Pagans, Princes, Priests: the Conversion of the Anglo-Saxons | University of Glasgow Pagans, Princes, Priests: the Conversion of View Online the Anglo-Saxons 1. McClure, J., Collins, R. & Bede. The ecclesiastical history of the English people: The greater chronicle ; Bede’s letter to Egbert. vol. The world’s classics (Oxford University Press, 1994). 2. Colgrave, B., Mynors, R. A. B. & Bede. Bede’s ecclesiastical history of the English people. vol. Oxford medieval texts (Clarendon P., 1969). 3. Bede, the Venerable, Saint, 673-735 & Webb, J. F. (James F. Lives of the Abbots of Wearmouth and Jarrow [in, The Age of Bede: Bede: Life of Cuthbert: Eddius Stephanus: Life of Wilfrid: Bede: Lives of the Abbots of Wearmouth and Jarrow: The Anonymous History of Abbot Ceolfrith with The Voyage of St BrendanTranslated by J.F. Webb: Edited with an Introduction by D.H. Farmer: Lives of the Abbots of Wearmouth and Jarrow and The Anonymous History of Abbot Ceolfrith translated by D. H. Farmer] (Penguin Classics). (Proquest LLC, 2011). 4. Colgrave, B. & Bede. Two lives of Saint Cuthbert: a Life by an anonymous monk of Lindisfarne and Bede’s prose Life. (Cambridge University Press, 1940). 5. Wallis, F. & Bede. Bede: the reckoning of time. vol. Translated texts for historians (Liverpool University Press, 1999). 1/47 09/30/21 Pagans, Princes, Priests: the Conversion of the Anglo-Saxons | University of Glasgow 6. Wallace-Hadrill, J. M. & Bede. Bede’s Ecclesiastical history of the English people: a historical commentary. (Clarendon Press, 1988). 7. Wormald, P. The times of Bede, 625-865: studies in early English Christian society and its historian. -
SDS Contributions
Contributions on Salvatorian History, Charism, and Spirituality Volume Twelve Key Elements Contributions on Salvatorian History, Charism, and Spirituality Volume Twelve Key Elements A Project of the Joint History and Charism Committee Ms. Janet E Bitzan, SDS Ms. Sue Haertel, SDS Sr. Nelda Hernandez, SDS Fr. Michael Hoffman, SDS Fr. Patric Nikolas, SDS Sr. Barbara Reynolds, SDS Mr. Anthony Scola, SDS Sr. Carol Thresher, SDS With Permission of the Superiors Sr. Beverly Heitke, SDS Provincial of the Congregation of the Sisters of the Divine Savior Mrs. Jaqueline White, SDS National Director of the Lay Salvatorians Fr. Jeff Wocken, SDS Provincial of the Society of the Divine Savior February, 2020 Contents Introduction . v Key Element: Charism . 1 Universality in the Family Charter and its Roots in Father Jordan . .3 Ms. Janet Bitzan, SDS Our Salvation In Jesus Christ . .11 Fr. Luis Alfredo Escalante, SDS Towards a Salvatorian Theory of Salvation in the African Perspective . 23 Fr. Marcel Mukadi Kabisay, SDS Toward a Salvatorian Theology of Salvation. .41 Fr. Thomas Perrin, SDS Exploring Universality as Inclusive Love. .49 Sr. Carol Thresher, SDS Signs of the Presence of the Holy Spirit in the Society of the Divine Savior . .63 Fr. Milton Zonta, SDS The Holy Spirit in Early Salvatorian History. .75 Sr. Carol Thresher, SDS Key Element: Mission. 91 The Salvatorian Family Charter and the Kingdom of God . .93 Sr. Rozilde Maria Binotto, SDS, and Sr. Therezinha Joana Rasera, SDS Salvatorian Mission for the Signs of the Time . .105 Sr. Dinusha Fernando, SDS Living in the “Now”: A Salvatorian Response to the Signs of the Times . -
Conciliar Traditions of the Catholic Church I: Jerusalem-Trent Spring, 2015; 3 Credits
ADTH 3000 01 — Conciliar Traditions of the Catholic Church I: Jerusalem-Trent Spring, 2015; 3 credits Instructor: Boyd Taylor Coolman email: [email protected] Office: Stokes Hall 321N Office Hours: Wednesday 10:00AM-12:00 Telephone: 2-3971 Schedule: Tu 6:30–9:00PM Room: Stokes Hall 195S Boston College Mission Statement Strengthened by more than a century and a half of dedication to academic excellence, Boston College commits itself to the highest standards of teaching and research in undergraduate, graduate and professional programs and to the pursuit of a just society through its own accomplishments, the work of its faculty and staff, and the achievements of its graduates. It seeks both to advance its place among the nation's finest universities and to bring to the company of its distinguished peers and to contemporary society the richness of the Catholic intellectual ideal of a mutually illuminating relationship between religious faith and free intellectual inquiry. Boston College draws inspiration for its academic societal mission from its distinctive religious tradition. As a Catholic and Jesuit university, it is rooted in a world view that encounters God in all creation and through all human activity, especially in the search for truth in every discipline, in the desire to learn, and in the call to live justly together. In this spirit, the University regards the contribution of different religious traditions and value systems as essential to the fullness of its intellectual life and to the continuous development of its distinctive intellectual heritage. Course Description This course is the first in a two-course sequence, which offers a comprehensive introduction to the conciliar tradition of the Roman Catholic Church. -
Bede Professor of Catholic Theology Advert
Durham University Department of Theology and Religion Bede Professor of Catholic Theology (Post Ref: 2403) Salary will be by negotiation within the Professorial range. Durham University’s Department of Theology and Religion, home to the Centre for Catholic Studies (CCS), is seeking an outstanding scholar-teacher with gifts for public communication for the Bede Chair of Catholic Theology, the only such endowed chair in Catholic theology in the UK since the Reformation. We are seeking a highly productive, deeply committed, energetic team-player who can define this unique role and fulfil its immense potential. Working in close collaboration with the other CCS staff members, associates, and postgraduate community, together with colleagues in other institutions nationally and internationally, and in co-ordination with the CCS Director and CCS Administrator, the Bede Professor will share in providing internationally regarded academic leadership in Catholic theology and Catholic studies in the public academy and so help further Durham University’s reputation as a world-centre in these regards. Together with the recognised excellence of her/his scholarship, the Bede Professor will have proven excellence also in teaching and public communication. The Bede Professor will not have any major administrative responsibilities but will instead carry out significant theological outreach work on behalf of the Diocese of Hexham and Newcastle and act as theological advisor, as required, to the Bishop of Hexham and Newcastle (approximately 20% of workload). As a consequence the post is restricted to practising (Roman) Catholics. Reference Number: 2403 Closing Date: 7th March 2013 Further details of the post and an application form are available on our website (http:// www.dur.ac.uk/jobs/) or telephone 0191 334 6498. -
New Directions for Catholic Theology. Bernard Lonergan's Move Beyond
JHMTh/ZNThG; 2019 26(1): 108–131 Benjamin Dahlke New Directions for Catholic Theology. Bernard Lonergan’s Move beyond Neo-Scholasticism DOI https://doi.org/10.1515/znth-2019-0005 Abstract: Wie andere aufgeschlossene Fachvertreter seiner Generation hat der kanadische Jesuit Bernard Lonergan (1904–1984) dazu beigetragen, die katho- lische Theologie umfassend zu erneuern. Angesichts der oenkundigen Gren- zen der Neuscholastik, die sich im Laufe des 19. Jahrhunderts als das Modell durchgesetzt hatte, suchte er schon früh nach einer Alternative. Bei aller Skep- sis gegenüber dem herrschenden Thomismus schätzte er Thomas von Aquin in hohem Maß. Das betraf insbesondere dessen Bemühen, die damals aktuellen wissenschaftlichen und methodischen Erkenntnisse einzubeziehen. Lonergan wollte dies ebenso tun. Es ging ihm darum, der katholischen Theologie eine neue Richtung zu geben, also von der Neuscholastik abzurücken. Denn diese berücksichtigte weder das erkennende Subjekt noch das zu erkennende Objekt hinreichend. Keywords: Bernard Lonergan, Jesuits, Neo-Scholasticism, Vatican II, Thomism Bernard Lonergan (1904–1984), Canadian-born Jesuit, helped to foster the re- newal of theology as it took place in the wake of Vatican II, as well in the council’s aftermath. He was aware of the profound changes the discipline was going through. Since the customary way of presenting the Christian faith – usu- ally identified with Neo-Scholasticism – could no longer be considered adequate, Lonergan had been working out an alternative approach. It was his intent to provide theology with new foundations that led him to incorporate contem- porary methods of science and scholarship into theological practice. Faith, as he thought, should be made intelligible to the times.1 Thus, Lonergan moved beyond the borders set up by Neo-Scholasticism. -
Augustine's Ecclesiology and Its Development Between
AUGUSTINE’S ECCLESIOLOGY AND ITS DEVELOPMENT BETWEEN THE YEARS 354-387AD By PAUL C.V. VUNTARDE Submitted in accordance with the requirements for the degree of MAGISTER ARTIUM In the subject CHURCH HISTORY at the UNIVERSITY OF PRETORIA SUPERVISOR: PROF. J. VAN OORT CO-SUPERVISOR: PROF. G.A. DUNCAN NOVEMBER 2012 © University of Pretoria ii Summary This study aims to establish what Augustine’s ecclesiology was between 354-387AD and how his ecclesial thoughts developed during that period. Scholarship has tended to neglect the importance of this period in understanding Augustine’s ecclesiology as a coherent whole (Alexander 2008:21). Like Harrison (2007: 165-179) and Alexander (2008:18-21), this study establishes that Augustine’s early ecclesiology and its development is an essential lens to understanding Augustine’s later ecclesiology. The thesis statement, which yielded a positive result, is the defining features of Augustine’s ecclesiology were in place by 387AD. A chronological textual approach was used to establish whether the thesis was positive or negative. Primary and secondary sources were used where appropriate to determine Augustine’s ecclesiology. This study established the different phases of Augustine’s ecclesial growth, what the contents of his ecclesiology most likely was during these different phases, how his early ecclesial thoughts influenced his future ecclesial thoughts and what lessons can be learnt for the South African church context. iii Key Terms Catechumen- One who has submitted himself/herself to the process of Catholic instruction though not yet baptized. Christian- One who believes that only through Christ’s sacrifice is one saved from the consequences of sin and death. -
THE NATIONAL CATHOLIC WEEKLY Feb. 14, 2011 $3.50 of MANY THINGS
THE NATIONAL CATHOLIC WEEKLY feb. 14, 2011 $3.50 OF MANY THINGS PUBLISHED BY JESUITS OF THE UNITED STATES hree years ago the time came the next few days, as I cut through pack - for a venerable Jesuit professor ing tape and unpacked, I found myself EDITOR IN CHIEF Drew Christiansen, S.J. T at Loyola University, veteran wondering, “Why did I ever bring this?” of decades of scholarship and teaching, and “Where will I ever find that?” I had EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT to move from Chicago to the Jesuit so much, but so much too was not there MANAGING EDITOR infirmary near Detroit. In distance, the anymore. And I was very tired from the Robert C. Collins, S.J. trip is only 300 miles, a couple of hours’ strain of moving, disposing of and leav - EDITORIAL DIRECTOR drive. In the imagination and in the ing behind. Karen Sue Smith heart, the trip is very, very long. I got into a familiar routine in the ONLINE EDITOR To lessen the trauma of the move, morning, drinking coffee and picking Maurice Timothy Reidy the office of the Jesuits’ Chicago up books I was working through in my CULTURE EDITOR Province asked David, a young man on old life. One of them was Rabbi James Martin, S.J. its staff, to help. David worked with Lawrence Kushner’s The Book of LITERARY EDITOR planning and office management and Words , a work on Jewish spirituality, Patricia A. Kossmann was fantastic at it. He was likewise from which I read a short chapter each POETRY EDITOR excellent at helping this older Jesuit day. -
ANGLO-SAXON ENGLAND Her Mon Mæg Giet Gesion Hiora Swæð
CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS ANGLO-SAXON ENGLAND Her mon mæg giet gesion hiora swæð EXECUTIVE EDITORS Simon Keynes, Rosalind Love and Andy Orchard Editorial Assistant Dr Brittany Schorn ([email protected]) ADVISORY EDITORIAL BOARD Professor Robert Bjork, Arizona State University, Tempe AZ 85287-4402, USA Professor John Blair, The Queen’s College, Oxford OX1 4AW, UK Professor Mary Clayton, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland Dr Richard Dance, St Catharine’s College, Cambridge CB2 1RL, UK Professor Roberta Frank, Dept of English, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520, USA Professor Richard Gameson, Dept of History, Durham University, Durham DH1 3EX, UK Professor Helmut Gneuss, Universität München, Germany Professor Simon Keynes, Trinity College, Cambridge CB2 1TQ, UK Professor Michael Lapidge, Clare College, Cambridge CB2 1TL, UK Professor Patrizia Lendinara, Facoltà di Scienze della Formazione, Palermo, Italy Dr Rosalind Love, Robinson College, Cambridge CB3 9AN, UK Dr Rory Naismith, Clare College, Cambridge CB2 1TL, UK Professor Katherine O’Brien O’Keeffe, University of California, Berkeley, USA Professor Andrew Orchard, Pembroke College, Oxford OX1 1DW, UK Professor Paul G. Remley, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195-4330, USA Professor Paul E. Szarmach, Medieval Academy of America, Cambridge MA 02138, USA PRODUCTION TEAM AT THE CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS Sarah Westlake (Production Editor, Journals) <[email protected]> Daniel Pearce (Commissioning Editor) <[email protected]> Cambridge University Press, Edinburgh Building, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge CB2 8BS Clare Orchard (copyeditor) < [email protected]> Dr Debby Banham (proofreader) <[email protected]> CONTACTING MEMBERS OF THE EDITORIAL BOARD If in need of guidance whilst preparing a contribution, prospective contributors may wish to make contact with an editor whose area of interest and expertise is close to their own. -
Codex Amiatinus
LOCAL STUDIES CENTRE FACT SHEET NUMBER 23 The Codex Amiatinus Abbot Ceolfrith, who succeeded Benedict Biscop as Abbot of the twin monastery of Wearmouth-Jarrow. The Bibles were made in the monastic scriptorium during his abbacy, 690-716 AD. It was a remarkable thing to undertake at the time; usually copies of books of the Bible were produced as single volumes (eg, the Book of Psalms) or volumes containing a small number of books (eg, the four Gospels). Ceolfrith intended to carry the Codex Amiatinus to Rome in AD 716 as a gift to Pope Gregory II. He left Wearmouth with an entourage of 80 followers, intending to spend his last days in Rome, but died in Langres monastery in France en route. Some of his followers took the Codex Amiatinus on to Rome and presented it to the Pope to fulfil Ceolfrith’s wishes. The later history of the book is unknown until it reappeared at the monastery of San Salvatore at Monte Amiata in Italy, where it was highly prized and thought to be a 6th century Italian work. When the monastery was closed in the 18th century it was Illustration of Ezra, the Old Testament scribe The History of the Codex Amiatinus The Codex Amiatinus was one of three great single- volume Bibles made at Wearmouth-Jarrow, written in the 8th century. It is the earliest one-volume Latin Bible to survive in the world. Wearmouth-Jarrow had been established in the late 7th century by the nobleman Benedict Biscop. After visiting Rome, Biscop, inspired by the architecture, art, treasures, music and books of the Roman church, endeavoured to bring the best of the continent back to his native Northumbria. -
STUDIES of the VENERABLE BEDE, the GREAT FAMINE of 1315-1322, and LIBRARIES in PRISONER of WAR CAMPS a Paper Submitted to the Gr
STUDIES OF THE VENERABLE BEDE, THE GREAT FAMINE OF 1315-1322, AND LIBRARIES IN PRISONER OF WAR CAMPS A Paper Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the North Dakota State University of Agriculture and Applied Science By Trista Stephanie Raezer-Stursa In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE Major Department: History, Philosophy, and Religious Studies October 2017 Fargo, North Dakota North Dakota State University Graduate School Title STUDIES OF THE VENERABLE BEDE, THE GREAT FAMINE OF 1315-1322, AND LIBRARIES IN PRISONER OF WAR CAMPS By Trista Stephanie Raezer-Stursa The Supervisory Committee certifies that this disquisition complies with North Dakota State University’s regulations and meets the accepted standards for the degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE SUPERVISORY COMMITTEE: Dr. Gerritdina (Ineke) Justitz Chair Dr. Verena Theile Dr. Mark Harvey Approved: October 19, 2017 Dr. Mark Harvey Date Department Chair ABSTRACT This paper includes three studies about the Venerable Bede, the Great Famine of 1315- 1322, and libraries in prisoner of war camps. The study of the Venerable Bede focuses on his views on and understanding of time, especially its relation to the Easter computus. The second study is a historiography of the Great Famine of 1315-1322, with an emphasis on the environmental aspects of the catastrophe. The third paper is a study of the libraries that were provided for German soldiers in prisoner of war camps in the United States during World War II, which includes an analysis of the role of reading in the United States’ attempt to re-educate the German prisoners. -
The Cambridge Companion to Bede Edited by Scott Degregorio Frontmatter More Information
Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-73073-0 - The Cambridge Companion to Bede Edited by Scott DeGregorio Frontmatter More information the cambridge companion to bede As the major writer and thinker of the Anglo-Saxon period, the Venerable Bede is a key figure in the study of the literature and thought of this time. This Companion, written by an international team of specialists, is a key introductory guide to Bede, his writings and his world. The first part of the volume focuses on Bede’s cultural and intellectual milieu, covering his life, the secular-political contexts of his day, the foundations of the Latin learning he inherited and sought to perpetuate, the ecclesiastical and monastic setting of early Northumbria, and the foundation of his home institution, Wearmouth-Jarrow. The book then considers Bede’s writing in detail, treating his educational, exegetical and histor- ical works. Concluding with a detailed assessment of Bede’sinfluence and recep- tion from the time of his death up to the modern age, the Companion enables the reader to view Bede’s writings within a wider cultural context. scott degregorio is Associate Professor of English Literature at the University of Michigan – Dearborn. He has published extensively on Bede as a biblical exegete and Church reformer. His books include, as editor, Innovation and Tradition in the Writings of the Venerable Bede, and, as translator, Bede: On Ezra and Nehemiah, which won the International Society of Anglo-Saxonists’ prize for best edition/translation published in Anglo-Saxon studies, 2005–7. A complete list of books in the series is at the back of this book.