Results 271 to 280 of about 14,204 (338)

Notes on Moral Theology: Moral Theology and History

Theological Studies, 2001
In section one of Notes on Moral Theology the author describes writings by moral theologians who use history for a variety of purposes, at least five different purposes, from determining a critical identity for moral theology to supporting endangered ideas and directing future investigations.
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A Mystical Moral Theology

New Blackfriars, 2002
The discipline of moral theology is undergoing noticeable self-evaluation. Moral theologians are exploring the connections between moral theology and Scripture, moral theology and virtue ethics, moral theology and Christology, moral theology and Patristics, moral theology and liturgy, and moral theology and spirituality.
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Kant's Moral Theology

British Journal for the History of Philosophy, 2010
A common factor in Kant's three Critiques is the recurrence of what has come to be known as his ‘moral theology’.1 Unsurprisingly, there is much controversy about how to interpret the moral argumen...
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Making Theology Moral

Scottish Journal of Theology, 1999
The relationship between theology and ethics has been largely determined in the modern era by the questions Immanuel Kant posed and the answers he gave. This contains a certain irony because in 1786 at Marburg Kant's philosophy was banned on the assumption that it threatened faith and morals. His demolition of the scholastic arguments for the existence
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Moral Theology with the Saints

Modern Theology, 2003
The article explores the way that the lives of the saints, and the church's remembrance and veneration of them provide a practical setting for moral reflection, for drawing near to God amid the ordinary, and for living graced and virtuous lives. It reviews recent developments in a theology of sanctity and inquires about the difference that the saints ...
David Matzko McCarthy, James Keating
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Kant's Moral Theology

Harvard Theological Review, 1917
The most generally acknowledged mode of apprehending God or argument for his existence, is the Moral. The argument has various forms, of which the more commonly accepted and influential, in its main principles, is that of Kant. Kant emphatically rejected the traditional arguments for the existence of God — the Ontological, Cosmological, and ...
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African Moral Theology

Theological Studies, 2001
This third section of Notes on Moral Theology is devoted to recent developments in Africa, particularly regarding themes that emerged from the Synod of Africa (1994). The author provides a brief methodological preface before discussing first the role of inculturation in African moral theology.
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Fundamental Moral Theology: Tradition [PDF]

open access: possibleTheological Studies, 2009
Theological ethicists around the world are turning toward history to comment on the method and arguments of earlier authoritative voices. The intent of this turn to the tradition is precisely to liberate theologians so as to find grounds for Roman Catholics to enter into greater dialogue with others around the world.
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