cart Cart 0 items
Login | Register | Help

The Craft of Theology

From Symbol to System

by Avery Robert Dulles


Review this book!
Average customer review: rating star rating star rating star rating star rating star (Based on 1 review; Read reviews)
No summary of this book is available at this time. Click here to contribute a summary of The Craft of Theology.

Editions of The Craft of Theology

9780824514563
ISBN

Binding/Format

Paperback
Publisher

Crossroad Pub Co
Date

1995
Price

$17.61
Buy now button
NEW
9780824511647
ISBN

Binding/Format

Hardcover
Publisher

Natl Book Network
Date

1992
Price

$16.94
Buy now button
Like New

Customer Reviews

on Oct 21 2008, killswan said:

"An author's family fascinates me. In this case the author is Jesuit Cardinal Avery Dulles, Roman Catholic theologian, grandson of a Presbyterian minister and nephew of the fifth CIA Director of Central Intelligence (and its first civilian head), Allen Welsh Dulles. Book titles also fascinate me, especially when one seems to echo another. In 1963 legendary spymaster Allen Dulles published THE CRAFT OF INTELLIGENCE (ISBN 1-59228-297-0). Three decades later, nephew Avery published THE CRAFT OF THEOLOGY in 1992, added to in 1995. Is there a connection? I really don't know -- yet. *** Both are fine books. Both make a case for the transparency and "learnableness" of one's professional craft: intelligence, theology. Avery Dulles's message is not complex in outline, though it is dense in detail. For a century and a half before the Second Vatican Council (1962 - 1965) the way Roman Catholic theology was officially done was called "Scholastic," essentially the way of the High Middle Ages, and especially of Saint Thomas Aquinas (1225 - 1249). Rooted in the thought categories of Aristotle and the pre-printing press ways of medieval university classrooms, the Scholastic method was to state a general principle (e.g. "there is no salvation outside the church"), give a "state of the question" including the history of the principle's coming to be and opinions pro and con of its truth. The lecturer or writer would then defend the principle against all attacks and move on to conclusions rigidly deducible from the principle. If there were six interpretations of a principle, in Scholasticism only one would be right. Once the teacher proved his point, the other views had to be false. *** By contrast, Avery Dulles in THE CRAFT OF INTELLIGENCE argues that propositions and principles are indeed important. But they are best grasped through "models." And if there are six good models, then we must use them all simultaneously and not reject five of them altogether simply because we prefer one above the rest. Dulles had taken a similar approach in his book MODELS OF THE CHURCH (1974, ISBN-10: 0385133685). *** Dulles goes on to generalize this method and contrast it with the Scholastic way which it has rapidly replaced. Avery Dulles notes that many post-Vatican II Catholic theologians have rushed wildly off in all directions at once, applying various models with abandon. The craft of theology is in danger, he argues, of becoming unmoored. He makes a case for his own favored approach: creating as he goes a theology of communication. By this he means stressing the ways God chooses to communicate with his creatures and they with him. Not just through Scripture and ritual but through the natural world all around us. It is full of clues that God invites us to solve. -OOO- "
Review this book!


Similar books


The Essential Guardini
The Essential Guardini by Romano Guardini
Eastern Orthodox Theology
Eastern Orthodox Theology by
Salt of the Earth
Salt of the Earth by Peter Seewald
Priestly Identity
Priestly Identity by Thomas J McGovern
For the Love of God
For the Love of God by

My shopping cart


...your cart is currently empty



Sign up to receive offers and updates: