Results 41 to 50 of about 94,713 (211)

LIVING LIFE TO THE FULL: THE SPIRIT AND ECO-FEMINIST SPIRITUALITY

open access: yesScriptura, 2013
José Comblin, a Latin American liberation theologian, described the presence of the Spirit in five dimensions: action, freedom, speech, community and life. These pro-vide the foundation for developing an ecological pneumatology leading to transfor-mative
Susan Rakoczy
doaj   +1 more source

Gender, Feeling and the Making of Korean Christian Knowledge in Sengoku Japan*

open access: yesJournal of Religious History, Volume 49, Issue 2, Page 141-156, June 2025.
This essay explores the production of Korean Christian knowledge in Sengoku Japan by analysing narratives about a vision said to have been experienced by an evangelised Korean woman, which circulated within Jesuit correspondence from Japan and in subsequent publications.
Susan Broomhall
wiley   +1 more source

Governmentality and the Ignatian Subject: A Foucauldian Reading of Jesuit Spirituality

open access: yesCahiers d'Études du Religieux- Recherches Interdisciplinaires
This article applies Michel Foucault’s understanding of governmentality to Ignatius Loyola’s spirituality. M. Foucault himself references Ignatius, and the recent interest in spiritual exercises includes attention to Ignatian practises in relation to M ...
Matthew W. Knotts
doaj   +1 more source

“With Delight and Desire”: Gender and Emotion in the Conversions of Japanese Women in Sixteenth‐Century Southern Japan

open access: yesJournal of Religious History, Volume 49, Issue 2, Page 192-209, June 2025.
This article examines the interplay of gender, emotions, and material culture in Jesuit conversion accounts in sixteenth‐century Japan. I analyse the rhetorical strategies of missionaries like Luís Fróis to better understand how conversion narratives were crafted to advance the Jesuits' goal of propagating Christianity in Japan and beyond.
Jessica O'Leary
wiley   +1 more source

De l’hypothèse d’une analogie entre « direction spirituelle » et cure psychanalytique

open access: yesL'Atelier du CRH, 2015
This article was presented in a doctoral conference entitled « Sacrés liens ! » that was organised by the CEIFR and the CARE research laboratories and took place at the EHESS school on may 21st of 2013.
Léo Botton
doaj   +1 more source

Desire: A Theological Reappraisal

open access: yesThe Heythrop Journal, Volume 66, Issue 1, Page 3-23, January 2025.
Abstract Desire and its cognates—longing, yearning—do a lot of hard work in modern theology, the work grounded in philosophical precedents going back at least as far as the early German Romantics. These precedents helped to inaugurate the twentieth century explorations of psychoanalysis.
Graham Ward
wiley   +1 more source

The Spirit as Plural Person

open access: yesInternational Journal of Systematic Theology, Volume 27, Issue 1, Page 94-125, January 2025.
Abstract According to plural person theory, a group of close friends can act together not just distributively, as separate individuals all at once, but also corporately, as a nonmetaphorical plural person supervening on the friends. This article proposes that the Spirit is a plural person in precisely this sense.
Olivia Bustion
wiley   +1 more source

A clinical trial of the Examen and mindfulness within a secular substance use disorder treatment program

open access: yesJournal of Addictions &Offender Counseling, Volume 45, Issue 1, Page 36-54, April 2024.
Abstract The Examen is a 500‐year‐old Jesuit introspective prayer and reflection. Recent research has indicated that it has utility in psychotherapy. This study implemented the Examen as a secular cognitive–behavioral tool in the first longitudinal clinical trial of the intervention with an addiction treatment population, comparing it directly to a ...
Christopher M. Buenrostro   +1 more
wiley   +1 more source

Imagining God

open access: yesModern Theology, Volume 40, Issue 1, Page 97-109, January 2024.
Abstract This article interrogates the role of the human imagination in ordinary perception and orientation, in encounters with art, and in practices of faith. Philosophers and psychologists have long argued that perception is irreducibly imaginative, in the sense that to perceive intelligibly is, in part, to integrate sensory data into forms or wholes
Judith Wolfe
wiley   +1 more source

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