About the Author:
John C. Cavadini is professor of theology and McGrath-Cavadini Director of the Institute for Church Life at the University of Notre Dame. He is editor and co-editor of a number of books, including Who Do You Say That I Am? Confessing the Mystery of Christ
Review:
“This [is] an excellent synthesis of Benedict’s thoughts concerning the power of Advent, love and truth, and God’s love for humanity. . . . It is highly recommended for advanced students of theology, and institutions with collections dedicated to ecclesiology, ecumenism, moral theology, and papal history.” (Catholic Library World)
"This is quite simply the best exploration of Pope Benedict's theology available in English. Some of these essays dig deep into the younger Ratzinger's Augustinian soil and reveal to us the roots of Benedict's papal teaching. Others trace the lines of growth from those roots out to his striking papal encyclicals, and to the apologetics of love that grounds his vision of the Church's task. The fruitfulness of the collection is perhaps most evident in the way that the authors do not simply repeat, but think with and in the light of Benedict’s theology. Above all, this collection displays Benedict’s theology as a personal, living faith and a reasoned faith, as a theology of divine and human love that invites humanity into faith’s re-imagining of human existence." (Lewis Ayres, Durham University)
“This volume, the result of a conference at the University of Notre Dame honouring Benedict the theologian on his eighty-fifth birthday, is an excellent set of twelve essays. The essays are valuable both individually and as a whole. . . . John C. Cavadini’s introduction turns the volume into a whole, suggesting that Benedict’s theology provides a way of holding together Augustine’s two phases of theology: the phases of discovery and of communication.” (Theology)
“In this collection the theology behind the writings of Benedict XVI is examined by a group of scholars from a variety of different backgrounds. They reflect on his Augustine thought context, his ecclesiology, his Christology, his liturgical and sacramental theology, and more.” (U.S. Catholic.com)
“Certainly achieving its goal to appreciate and ‘to honor [Benedict XVI], as theologian,’ the essays contained therein provide much fodder for theological background and discussion around key themes of Benedict XVI’s writings as Pope, especially his encyclicals, and on his writing prior to his election as he engaged currents of cultural thought more directly.” (Journal for Peace and Justice Studies)
“Explorations in the Theology of Benedict XVI explores the religious writing of the depart[ed] pope, detailing his studies into scripture and the writings of the countless monks before him. . . . A core addition to any Catholic theological discussion, highly recommended.” (Library Bookwatch)
“This volume stems from a conference held at the University of Notre Dame to honor Pope Benedict XVI’s 85th birthday in April 2012. . . . Most readers will learn many things from this book, which examines so many facets of Joseph Ratzinger’s writings. . . . Readers of this journal will be especially interested in a text that Beretta cites to illustrate the divine gratuitousness that always precedes the gratuity of human work and gifts.” (Cistercian Studies Quarterly)
"Shunning simplistic varieties of both caricature and adulation, these essays provide an appreciative but rigorous engagement with the breadth and depth of Benedict’s theology. The result is not merely a collection of summaries of different texts and themes but rather a convincing portrait of the vitality, integrity, and fecundity of Benedict’s theological vision and its prophetic witness to the evangelical message of God’s unfathomable love." (Khaled Anatolios, Boston College School of Theology and Ministry)
"This collection of essays on the theology of Benedict XVI offers a new apologetics founded ‘not so much on the desire to outdo one’s opponent in dialectical victory but to allow the Love in which the original Word was spoken . . . to make its own case, its own apologia, in the hearts of those who hear.’ It is, in short, an excellent presentation of what Benedict XVI means when he says that ‘love and reason are the twin pillars of all reality.' The essays sympathetically uncover the pontiff’s theological foundation stones." (Tracey Rowland, John Paul II Institute, Melbourne, Australia)
“This volume is a truly beautiful and deep look at the theological work of one of the Church’s greatest living theologians. [It] is thorough and reflects the breadth of its subject.” (The Thomist)
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