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The Legacy and Limits of Vatican II in an Age of Crisis
Product Information
▼▲| Title: The Legacy and Limits of Vatican II in an Age of Crisis By: Massimo Faggioli(ED.), Edward P. Hahnenberg(ED.) & Kristin M. Colberg(ED.) Format: Paperback Number of Pages: 336 Vendor: Liturgical Press Academic | Publication Date: 2025 Dimensions: 9 X 6 (inches) Weight: 1 pound 4 ounces ISBN-13: 9780814689288 Stock No: WW689288 |
Publisher's Description
▼▲Packed with new insights from some of todays most highly regarded voices on the Second Vatican Council, The Legacy and Limits of Vatican II in an Age of Crisis enacts the living tradition of the church by proposing a richer history to be told sixty years from its celebration, and a broader theology to inspire our work today.
Vatican II did not anticipate our contemporary challenges, nor do its documents provide specific guidelines or step-by-step instructions for addressing them. But that does not make the council irrelevant. As a touchstone of the churchs magisterial tradition, the Second Vatican Council remains foundational for the life and mission of the Catholic Church today. However, like any monument of the tradition, the council requires ongoing investigation, critical analysis, and constant reconsideration from a diversity of contemporary perspectives if it is going to contribute to the living tradition of the church.
Through historical and theological lenses, the contributors aim to rediscover forgotten voices and overlooked moments of Vatican II that may have something even more important to say today. Each chapter promises to surprise, enlighten, inspire, and teach in fresh and unexpected ways. The contributors offer readers striking insights on the councils teaching related to the sexual abuse crisis, antiracism, politics, the Synod on Synodality, and much more. By reexamining the teaching of Vatican II from the perspective of our present ecclesial crisis, readers will have a better understanding of how its legacy and limits affect the ongoing reform of the church in a much-changed theological, ecclesial, and social landscape.
Contributors:
Matteo Caponi
Catherine E. Clifford
Kristin M. Colberg
Agnès Desmazières
Massimo Faggioli
Theresa Gardner
Edward P. Hahnenberg
Timothy Hanchin
Tuan A. Hoang
Mary Kate Holman
Jaisy A. Joseph
Florian Klug
William Kuncken
Josephine Laffin
Martin Madar
Evgeniia Muzychenko
William I. Orbih
Bernard G. Prusak
Daniel A. Rober
Author Bio
▼▲Catherine E. Clifford is professor of systematic and historical theology at Saint Paul University, Ottawa, Canada. She is presently vice president of the Catholic Theological Society of America and serves as a North American delegate to the XVI General Assembly of the Synod on Synodality. Among her recent publications are The Oxford Handbook on Vatican II (2023), co-edited with Massimo Faggioli, and Vatican II at 60: Re-Energizing the Renewal (Orbis, 2024).
Kristin M. Colberg is associate professor of theology at Saint John's University and School of Theology and the College of Saint Benedict, and the sole U.S. member to serve on the theological commission for the Synod on Synodality. She received her doctorate at the University of Notre Dame in systematic theology. She is the co-author with Jos Moons, SJ, of The Future of Synodality: How We Move Forward from Here (Liturgical Press, 2025), author of Vatican I and Vatican II: Councils in the Living Tradition (Liturgical Press, 2016), and the co-editor of Speaking Truth in Love, a festschrift in honor of Cardinal Walter Kasper (Liturgical Press, 2014). Colberg also serves as a member of the Anglican-Roman Catholic International Commission (ARCIC).
Massimo Faggioli is professor of historical and contemporary ecclesiology at the Loyola Institute at Trinity College Dublin and the School of Religion, Theology, and Peace Studies, and a contributing editor for Commonweal. He is an internationally-established scholar in the area of Vatican II and the papacy especially, and a renowned public commentator on church affairs. Among his books with Liturgical Press are The Legacy and Limits of Vatican II in an Age of Crisis (2025); True Reform: Liturgy and Ecclesiology in Sacrosanctum Concilium (2012); Pope John XXIII: The Medicine of Mercy (2014); and Sorting Out Catholicism: A Brief History of the New Ecclesial Movements (2014).
Edward P. Hahnenberg is the Breen Chair in Catholic Theology at John Carroll University. He is the author or co-editor of seven booksincluding Theodore Hesburgh, CSC: Bridge Builder (2020); Theology for Ministry: An Introduction for Lay Ministers (2014) published by Liturgical Press. He is a past delegate to the U.S. Lutheran-Catholic Dialogue and former theological consultant to the U.S. Bishops Subcommittee on Lay Ministry.
Editorial Reviews
▼▲Amanda C. Osheim, PhD, Professor of Practical Theology, Loras College
"Vatican II didnt quite join all the dots of its teaching; nor could it have anticipated the crises and new perspectives that have emerged during its reception. But it did give its receivers some direction on how to do so, especially by reading the signs of the times. This book acknowledges that, like every general council of the church, Vatican IIs interpretation and adaptation in new contexts requires honest attention to its shortcomings and postconciliar challenges, by attending to the overall vision of the council. This book presents an important advance in Vatican II research."
Rev. Dr. Ormond Rush, Associate Professor, Australian Catholic University
"A significant fresh contribution to the vast literature on Vatican II, shaped by four distinguished scholars deeply committed to the historiography and ecclesial reception of the council. Its freshness is in going beyond such concerns to ask after the lacunae in the councils focus, narration, and implementation, and what it means to bring its trajectories into conversation with the crises, concerns, and possibilities of todays Catholic church in diverse global contexts. Its significance lies not just in the stimulating set of studies it gathers together but in the direction and character of the conversation it opens."
Paul D. Murray, Professor of Systematic Theology, Durham University
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