Description
Book SynopsisInterreligious Reading After Vatican II brings together for the first time leading scholars from within and outside the Catholic tradition to discuss and undertake interreligious reading in the light of Vatican II.
Trade Review"Based in both theory and a wealth of practical experience, this collection of essays is valuable to scholars and veterans of interreligious reading, especially those who might be looking to learn more about the specific disciplines of Comparative Theology, Scriptural Reasoning and Receptive Ecumenism.” (Touchstone, 1 June 2014)
Table of ContentsIntroduction – Interreligious Reading After Vatican II: Scriptural Reasoning, Comparative Theology and Receptive Ecumenism (David F. Ford)
1. Opening up a Dialogue: Dei Verbum and the Religions (Michael Barnes, SJ)
2. Deep Reasonings: Sources Chretiennes, Ressourcement, and the Logic of Scripture in the years before – and after – Vatican II (Kevin L. Hughes)
3. Catholic Reasoning and Reading Across Traditions (David Dault)
4. An Analogical Reading of Christian Prophecy: The Case of Muhammad (Anna Bonta Moreland)
5. Families of Receptive Theological Learning: Scriptural Reasoning, Comparative Theology, and Receptive Ecumenism (Paul D. Murray)
6. Scriptural Reasoning and the Legacy of Vatican II: Their Mutual Engagement and Significance (David F. Ford)
7. Scriptural Reasoning and the Discipline of Christian Doctrine (Mike Higton)
8. Interreligious Reading in the Context of Dialogue: When Interreligious Reading “Fails” (Tracy Sayuki Tiemeier)
9. Long-Term Disagreement: Philosophical Models in Scriptural Reasoning and Receptive Ecumenism (Nicholas Adams)
10. In the Balance: Interior and Shared Acts of Reading (Francis X. Clooney, SJ)
11. A Good Word is a Good Tree: A Muslim Response to the Interfaith Challenges of Vatican II (Maria Massi Dakake)
12. Re-socializing Scholars of Religious, Theological, and Theo-Philosophical Inquiry (Peter Ochs)
Index
Notes on contributors