Image for Christ, the sacrament of the encounter of God.

Christ, the sacrament of the encounter of God. - volume I

Part of the The collected works of Edward Schillebeeckx series
See all formats and editions

This is a new edition of the 1963 classic which gave Christological thought a new direction.

As far back as his first major book Schillebeeckx propounded an anthropological approach to the sacraments.

In Christ the Sacrament of the Encounter with God , he draws on theologically fruitful work by phenomenological anthropologists like Merleau-Ponty, Buytendijk and Binswanger.

That makes Schillebeeckx's distinctive idiom and modern approach appealing even today.

He rediscovers, as it were from within, the notions forged by scholastic theology, and thus restores to us a theology of the sacraments rooted in the biblical and patristic soil from which they first sprang.

Schillebeeckx's speculative synthesis of this quest still has a fresh ring to it.

He describes Christ as the primordial sacrament in a reflection on his public ministry, death and resurrection inspired by the universal human search for such a 'sacrament'.

He concludes that the church's sacraments have to be an earthly extension of the liberation brought by Christ's story.

Schillebeeckx ends by describing sacraments as grace made visible that gives crowning moments in Christian life a mystical quality.

Edward Schillebeeckx Collected Works bring together the most important and influential works of the Dutch Dominican and theologian Edward Schillebeeckx (1914-2009) in a reliable edition.

All translations have been carefully checked or revised, some texts are presented in English for the first time.

The page numbers of earlier editions are included. Each volume carries a foreword by an internationally renowned Schillebeeckx expert.

This edition makes Schillebeeckx available for a new generation of scholars and students.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£90.00
Product Details
Bloomsbury
1472558340 / 9781472558343
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
25/09/2014
United Kingdom
English
162 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%