Description

Book Synopsis
The Holy Spirit as the Universal Touch and Goal

Trade Review
This is a good book, and a delight to read; one of the best you could read on the Spirit. Its author is an elderly theologian, a monk and priest of St. John’s Abbey, Collegeville, a great ecumenist, a gifted writer and clearly a deeply spiritual man. He has a fine gift for language, and he wears his scholarship lightly. This is a book that deserves wide reading and deep pondering.Pacifica
Chapter by chapter, insight by insight, the word ‘magisterial’ easily comes to mind. The book is a worthy capstone to a lifetime of distinguished scholarship, and it is must reading for anyone interested in a theology of the Holy Spirit.Sewanee Theological Revie
McDonnell has provided a helpful overview of the formation of the Christian doctrinal tradition concerning the Holy Spirit and has indicated a number of important implications and corollaries of this tradition for future theologizing.Anglican Theological Review
McDonnell's book covers a lot of territory and is difficult to summarize. He has synthesized the best work of the Trinity and on pneumatology done over the past quarter century. Although McDonnell is a systematic theologian, he is conversant with the work of New Testament exegetes, the patristic tradition, medieval monasticism, and contemporary studies on the Trinity by Congar, David Coffey, Catherine LaCugna, Walter Kasper, P. Florensky, H. Muehlen, John Zizioulas, and others. Some sections of this book simply took my breath away because of the author's profound knowledge of the theological tradition wedded to his language, which at times melts into poetry. It is difficult for me to recommend this book too highly.Richard Penaskovic, Auburn University, Alabama. The Heythrop Journal, London
It is . . . a wonderful snapshot of how to do theology (and pneumatology) in a postmodern and postfundationalistic world.PNEUMA
This carefully researched and beautifully written volume is the chef d'oeuvre of one of the most distinguished monastic scholars in our time. For McDonnell 'to do pneumatology is to do Trinity.' His study of the Spirit, therefore, is not only a much-needed exercise in pneumatology; it also provides a comprehensive view of Christ, church, Trinity and eschatology. Long-awaited and heartily welcomed, The Other Hand of God will find its place anywhere the core of Christian faith is taken seriously.Michael Downey, Author Altogether Gift: A Trinitarian Spirituality
. . . it is a work of serious scholarship, whose deceptively light style belies the weight of research and analysis it represents. It would make a fine contribution to any class on pneumatology or spirituality at an undergraduate or graduate level.Theology Today
McDonnell is especially illuminating in his treatment of early Christian and patristic sources, and is a sure guide to key puzzlements about the mission and identity of the One concerning whom Hilary of Poitiers said, 'We should neither be silent nor should we speak.' The Christian Century

Table of Contents
To Do Pneumatology is to Do Trinity; Struggling with Ambiguity; The Way of Doxology; To Do Pneumatology is to Do Eschatology; Movement Toward Fixity: Holy Spirit in Patristic Eschatology; To Do Pneumatology Is to Start at the Beginning,; No Unified Vision in the New Testament; Losing the Battle to Stay with the Imprecision of the Scriptures; The Mission of the Spirit: Junior Grade?; God Beyond the Self of God; The Return: The Highway Back to the Father; The Spirit Is the Touch of God; The Tradition of Subordinationism; Basil: Not Subordination but Communion of Life with the Father and the Son; Gregory Nazianzus: The Divine Pedagogy in Steps; The Council of Constantinople: The Triumph of Discretion; To Do Pneumatology is to Start with Experience; Experience of the Spirit in the Early Church; William of St. Thierry: 'So I May Know by Experience,'; Bernard of Clairvaux: 'Today We Read in the Book of Experience,'; The Role of Pneumatology in an Integral Theology,; The Continuing Quest for a Theology of the Holy Spirit,; Toward a Theology in the Holy Spirit."

The Other Hand of God The Holy Spirit as the Universal Touch and Goal

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A Paperback by Kilian McDonnell

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    View other formats and editions of The Other Hand of God The Holy Spirit as the Universal Touch and Goal by Kilian McDonnell

    Publisher: Liturgical Press
    Publication Date: 11/1/2003 12:00:00 AM
    ISBN13: 9780814651711, 978-0814651711
    ISBN10: 0814651712

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    The Holy Spirit as the Universal Touch and Goal

    Trade Review
    This is a good book, and a delight to read; one of the best you could read on the Spirit. Its author is an elderly theologian, a monk and priest of St. John’s Abbey, Collegeville, a great ecumenist, a gifted writer and clearly a deeply spiritual man. He has a fine gift for language, and he wears his scholarship lightly. This is a book that deserves wide reading and deep pondering.Pacifica
    Chapter by chapter, insight by insight, the word ‘magisterial’ easily comes to mind. The book is a worthy capstone to a lifetime of distinguished scholarship, and it is must reading for anyone interested in a theology of the Holy Spirit.Sewanee Theological Revie
    McDonnell has provided a helpful overview of the formation of the Christian doctrinal tradition concerning the Holy Spirit and has indicated a number of important implications and corollaries of this tradition for future theologizing.Anglican Theological Review
    McDonnell's book covers a lot of territory and is difficult to summarize. He has synthesized the best work of the Trinity and on pneumatology done over the past quarter century. Although McDonnell is a systematic theologian, he is conversant with the work of New Testament exegetes, the patristic tradition, medieval monasticism, and contemporary studies on the Trinity by Congar, David Coffey, Catherine LaCugna, Walter Kasper, P. Florensky, H. Muehlen, John Zizioulas, and others. Some sections of this book simply took my breath away because of the author's profound knowledge of the theological tradition wedded to his language, which at times melts into poetry. It is difficult for me to recommend this book too highly.Richard Penaskovic, Auburn University, Alabama. The Heythrop Journal, London
    It is . . . a wonderful snapshot of how to do theology (and pneumatology) in a postmodern and postfundationalistic world.PNEUMA
    This carefully researched and beautifully written volume is the chef d'oeuvre of one of the most distinguished monastic scholars in our time. For McDonnell 'to do pneumatology is to do Trinity.' His study of the Spirit, therefore, is not only a much-needed exercise in pneumatology; it also provides a comprehensive view of Christ, church, Trinity and eschatology. Long-awaited and heartily welcomed, The Other Hand of God will find its place anywhere the core of Christian faith is taken seriously.Michael Downey, Author Altogether Gift: A Trinitarian Spirituality
    . . . it is a work of serious scholarship, whose deceptively light style belies the weight of research and analysis it represents. It would make a fine contribution to any class on pneumatology or spirituality at an undergraduate or graduate level.Theology Today
    McDonnell is especially illuminating in his treatment of early Christian and patristic sources, and is a sure guide to key puzzlements about the mission and identity of the One concerning whom Hilary of Poitiers said, 'We should neither be silent nor should we speak.' The Christian Century

    Table of Contents
    To Do Pneumatology is to Do Trinity; Struggling with Ambiguity; The Way of Doxology; To Do Pneumatology is to Do Eschatology; Movement Toward Fixity: Holy Spirit in Patristic Eschatology; To Do Pneumatology Is to Start at the Beginning,; No Unified Vision in the New Testament; Losing the Battle to Stay with the Imprecision of the Scriptures; The Mission of the Spirit: Junior Grade?; God Beyond the Self of God; The Return: The Highway Back to the Father; The Spirit Is the Touch of God; The Tradition of Subordinationism; Basil: Not Subordination but Communion of Life with the Father and the Son; Gregory Nazianzus: The Divine Pedagogy in Steps; The Council of Constantinople: The Triumph of Discretion; To Do Pneumatology is to Start with Experience; Experience of the Spirit in the Early Church; William of St. Thierry: 'So I May Know by Experience,'; Bernard of Clairvaux: 'Today We Read in the Book of Experience,'; The Role of Pneumatology in an Integral Theology,; The Continuing Quest for a Theology of the Holy Spirit,; Toward a Theology in the Holy Spirit."

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