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The Analogy of Beauty: An Introduction to the Theology of Hans Urs von Balthasar PDF

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THE BEAUTY OF CHRIST A Introduction to the Theology of Hans Urs von Balthasar Edited by Bede McGregor, a.p. and Thomas Norris T&TCLARK EDINBURGH T&TCLARKLTD 59 GEORGE STREET EDINBURGH EH2 2LQ SCOTLAND e Copyrigh, T&T Clark L,d. 19 94 AU rights reserved. No pan of this publication nuy be reprodtu:ed. nored in a retrieval system. or tr.uumincd. in any form or by any means, dctnonic. mcch.anic:d. photocopying. recording or otherwise, wichout the prior pcrmis .. •i on ofT&T O.rk L,d. Firs< published 1994 ISBN 0 567 09697 1 British Library Cataloguing-in-Publicuion Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British library Types<' by T riniry T ypes<ning. Edinburgh Printed and bound in Gmt Britain by Bookcl"2fi. Avon CONTENTS Notes on Contributors vii Acknowledgments ix Foreword by Cardinal Cahal Daly xi Introduction 1. Hans Urs von Balthasar: His Cultural and 10 Theological Education Henrid, S.]. P~ttr 2. Theological Aesthetics 23 Brtanddn L~ahy 3. The Biblical Basis of Glory 56 John Rich" 4. The Fathers: The Church's Intimate, Youthful Diary 73 D~jrdr~ Carabjn~ 5. Theological Dramatics 92 Gtrard 0 'Hanlon, S.]. 6. Marian Light on Our Human Mystery 112 Johann Roten, S.M. 7. Youthful UntO Death: The Spirit of Childhood 140 John Saward 8. The Logic of Divine Glory 161 John 0 'Donn~//, S.]. v vi THE BEAUlY OF CHRIST 9. Banh and Balthasar: An Ecumenical Dialogue 171 John Thompson 10. The Wider Ecumenism: Christian Prayer and 193 Other Rdigions Btdt MrGrtgor. O.P. II. The Symphonic Unity of His Theology: An Overview 213 Thomas Norris 12. Appendix 253 Do We Get Beyond Plato? A Critical Appreciation of the Theological Aesthetics Notl Dtrmot OVonoghut. O.D.C. A Balthasar Reading List 267 Name Index 270 Subject Index 275 NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS Deirdre Carabine: was formerly Newman Scholar at University College, Dub lin and is now Professor ofP hilosophy at the Uganda Martyrs University in Kampala. Peter Henrici, 5.]: was formerly ProfessorofModern Philosophy at the Gregorian University, Rome, and Dean of the Faculty ofP hilosophy in the same University, and is now auxiliary Bishop of Chur, Switzerland. Breandan Leahy: is Lecrurer in Systematic Theology at Clonlifl'e College and Mater Dei Institute of Education, Dublin. Bede McGregor, O.P: is Professor ofMissiology at St Patrick's College, Maynooth. Thomas Norris: is Lecrurer in Dogmatic Theology at St Patrick's College, Maynooth. Gerard O'Hanlon, 5.]: is Professor ofS ystematic Theology at the Milltown Institute of Philosophy and Theology, Dublin. John O'Donnell,S.]: is Professor ofD ogmatic Theology at the Ponrifical Gregorian University, Rome. Noel Dermot O'Donoghue, O.D.C: was formerly Professor of Philosophy at St Patrick's College, Maynooth and subsequently Lecturer in Syslemalic Theol ogy at New College, Edinburgh. vii viii THE BEAUTY OF CHRIST John Riches: is Professor of Biblical Studies at the University of Glasgow. Johann Roten. S.M: is director of the International Marian Research Institute at the University of Dayton. Ohio. U.S.A. John Saward: was formerly Professor of Dogmatic Theology at Ushaw College. Durham and is now Professor ofS ystematic Theol ogy at St Charles Borromeo Seminaty. Philadelphia. U.S.A. John Thompson: was formerly Moderator of the Pr.sbyt. .i an Church in Ireland and is Professor of Dogmatic Theology at Union Theological College. Belfast. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Many people helped to make this work possible. Our sincere thanks go first to the contributors who came from fur and ncar; to his Eminence Cardinal Cahal B. Daly for writing the Foreword; to Monsignor Mice:il Ledwith, President of Maynooth college and friend of Fr Hans Urs von Balthasar who encouraged and gave substantial support for the conference on which the book is based; to the Bishops and kind friends without whose sponsorship it would not have taken place; to the colleagues who advised and collaborated with us, especially Fr Tom O'Houghlin; to a dedicated group of seminarians from St Patrick's College, one ofw hom, the Reverend Ciar:!n Woods, died tragically only rwo months before ordination - sofas na gIDirt ara anum dhllis {this is Gaelic for 'May the light of glory be on his noble soul'}; to Hanspeter Heinz, Professor of Pastoral Theology at the University of Augsburg; to Mr Stratford Caldecort for his practical and patient counseL To these and the many other friends, (00 numerous to mention, we express our heartfelt thanks. Bede McGregor O.P. and Thomas Norr;' St Patrick i Co/kgt Maynooth FOREWORD Thtlmitation ofChmt is notoriously scornful about the university theologians and theology, the philosophers and philosophy of the authot's time, the late founeenth and early fifteenth centuty. a Thomas Kempis impatiently says of what he calls the teaching of 'the schools': What does it profit you to dispute deeply about the Trinity, if you be wanting in humility, and so be displeasing to the Trinity? In ttuth, sublime words make not a saint and a just man; but it is a vinuous life that makes one dear to God. I would rather feel compunction, than know how to define ir. If you should know the whole Bible ourwardly, and the sayings of all the philosophers, what would it all ptofit you without charity and the grace of God ... (Book I. Chapttr I). Truly, a humble rustic that serves God is better than a proud philosopher who ponders the courses oft he stars and neglects himself ... Cease ftom overweening desire of knowledge; because many distractions are found there, and much delu sion. Learned men are vety willing to seem wise, and to be called so. Many are the things which it is oflittle or no profit to the soul to know. The more you know, and the better, so much the heavier will your judgment therefore be, unless your life also be more holy. Be not lifted up by any skill or learning you have; but rather fear for the knowledge that is given you (Book I. Chap,., II). What signifies making a great dispute about hidden and obscure things which we shall not be reproved in the judg ment for having been ignorant of? And what matter is it to us of gtntra and Iptdd He to whom the Eternal Word speaks is delivered from a multitude of opinions ... I am often times wearied with the many things I read and hear; in You alone, my God, is all I wish or long for. Let all teachers hold their xi xii THE BEAlJIY OF CHRIST peace. and all created things keep silence in your presence; do You alone speak to me. The humble knowledge of oneself is a surer way to God than he who researches after science ... Because many take more pains to be learned than to lead good lives. therefore th<y often go astray and bear no fruit at all. or but little. Oh. if people would be as diligent in the rooting out of vices and the grafting in of virtues as they arc in mooting questions. there would not be so many evils and scandals among the people. nor such laxity in monasteries! Truly. when the day of judgment comes. it will not be asked of us. what we have read. but what we have done; not what fine discourses we have made. but how like religious we have lived. Tell me where now arc all those doctors and masters with whom you were well acquainted while they were yet alive. and in the gloty of their learning? Others now hold their preferments and I do not know whether they ever think of them ... Oh. how quickly the gloty of the world passes away! Oh. that their life had been in keeping with their learning! Then would they have studied and lectured to good purpose ... He is truly most learned who does the will of God and forsakes his own will (Book I. Chapur Ill). The author's apparent dismissal of theology has been called anti intellectualism. This. together with his expressions ofc ontempt for the world and disparagement of the self. have lead to a virtual banishment. if not banning. of the Imitation of Christ. once pre scribed and standard spiritual reading. from the libraries ofs eminar ians. a"d ofp ersons in religious formation and students of theology. In the post-Council period. this book has been held to be one of the most characteristic expressions of all that the Second Vatican Council reacted against: the flight from the world. the disparage ment of the intellect. the belittling of nature. the demeaning of the human. the refusal of dialogue with the world. I think that the Imitation has been dismissed toO facilely and that it is due for a re-evaluation. The scholastic theology against which the Imitation was reacting had indeed become barren and arid. a substitution for the living Word of God. rather than an exploration of it. Thomas it Kempis is dismissing. not theology but a debased FOREWORD xiii way of th<ologising. He could be seen as pleading for a different way of doing th<ology, where th<ology becomes attentive listening to the Word ofG od, rather than an inteUecruaI construction, modelled on the philosophical speculation current in the culture of the time. He was in fact calling, not fora rejection of th<ology, but for what we might more righdy describe as 're-sourcing' of th<ology in Scripture and the early Fathers. His reaction to the academic th<ology of the schools, was, 1 suggest, not entirely different hom the renewal which prepared the Second Vatican Council and which pervades ilS documents. The Imitation is a passionate repetition, over and over again, of Augustine's words, in reference to the Bible, Tollt Itgt (Take up a and read). Towards the end of his life, Thomas Kempis re marked: 'I have sought for rest everywhere but 1 have found it nowhere except in a little corner with a little book.' The author loves and lauds the holy Fathers for their turning of theology from words into daily living. His whole attitude is succinctly expressed in the sentence: 'God wills us to become perfecdy subject to himself and by the love that burns in us to transcehd all reason.' (Book 1. ChapuT XlV) This long excursus on the Imitation has, 1b elieve, relevance to the theology of Hans Urs von Balthasar. Th<ology in every age, and in our own time no less than in the fifteenth century, can become accommodated too completely to the surrounding intellectual culture. Fr Michael Paul Gallagher remarked somewhere that religion can easily become acculturated 'within the superficial hotizons of the dominant culture, as if kidnapped by merely liberal assumptions'. Prophetic voices are needed to call theology back to the 'experience of the Holy', 'the encounter with the Living God', from which all theology must flow and to which it must return, if a it is to be worthy of its name as discourse about God. Thomas Kempis was such a prophetic voice in his time. Hans Urs von Balthasar's was such a voice in our time, as is the voice of his admirer and friend, Pope John Paul II. THEOLOGY AND PRAYER Th<ology is both relativised by prayer and perfected by prayer. A

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