{"title":"书评:Henri de Lubac,梵蒂冈会议笔记:第一卷和第二卷","authors":"Matthew A. Rothaus Moser","doi":"10.1177/1063851220969885","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"“What will this Council be?” This is a question that Henri de Lubac (1896–1991) asked in anticipation of the opening of the Second Vatican Council (1962–1965). It is a question that remains apropos today nearly 60 years after the Council as historians and theologians consider the legacy of Vatican II and what it means for the Roman Catholic Church today. With the publication of the two volumes of de Lubac’s Vatican Council Notebooks, Ignatius Press offers anglophone scholars a new window for looking backward to the Council’s unfolding, development, and contested conclusions, as a way of looking forward to the ongoing work of renewing, revising, extending, and translating the Council’s accomplishments into our own day. The Notebooks cover a period of 5 years, from de Lubac’s initial—and surprising—appointment to the Preparatory Theological Commission in the summer of 1960 to the closing Mass of the Council in December of 1965. These two volumes include versions of de Lubac’s six council notebooks that de Lubac himself redacted for publication. Despite these redactions, the Notebooks depict the Council in unprecedented detail through de Lubac’s near-daily chronicle of conciliar happenings. The Notebooks are aimed at a narrow scholarly audience and the intellectual cost of admission is high. These are not aimed at a general readership, even a general scholarly readership. But scholars of Vatican II, 20th-century Catholicism, and de Lubac’s theology will find in these volumes a treasure 969885 PRE0010.1177/1063851220969885Pro Ecclesia: A Journal of Catholic and Evangelical TheologyBook Review book-review2020","PeriodicalId":223812,"journal":{"name":"Pro Ecclesia: A Journal of Catholic and Evangelical Theology","volume":"13 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-02-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Book Review: Henri de Lubac, Vatican Council Notebooks: Volume 1 and Volume 2\",\"authors\":\"Matthew A. Rothaus Moser\",\"doi\":\"10.1177/1063851220969885\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"“What will this Council be?” This is a question that Henri de Lubac (1896–1991) asked in anticipation of the opening of the Second Vatican Council (1962–1965). It is a question that remains apropos today nearly 60 years after the Council as historians and theologians consider the legacy of Vatican II and what it means for the Roman Catholic Church today. With the publication of the two volumes of de Lubac’s Vatican Council Notebooks, Ignatius Press offers anglophone scholars a new window for looking backward to the Council’s unfolding, development, and contested conclusions, as a way of looking forward to the ongoing work of renewing, revising, extending, and translating the Council’s accomplishments into our own day. The Notebooks cover a period of 5 years, from de Lubac’s initial—and surprising—appointment to the Preparatory Theological Commission in the summer of 1960 to the closing Mass of the Council in December of 1965. These two volumes include versions of de Lubac’s six council notebooks that de Lubac himself redacted for publication. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
“这个委员会将会是什么样子?”这是Henri de Lubac(1896-1991)在第二次梵蒂冈大公会议(1962-1965)开幕前提出的问题。在大公会议召开近60年后的今天,当历史学家和神学家考虑梵蒂冈第二次会议的遗产以及它对今天的罗马天主教会的意义时,这个问题仍然是恰当的。随着两卷de Lubac的梵蒂冈会议笔记的出版,伊格内修斯出版社为英语学者提供了一个新的窗口,回顾会议的展开、发展和有争议的结论,作为一种期待正在进行的工作的方式,更新、修改、扩展和翻译会议的成就到我们自己的一天。《笔记》涵盖了5年的时间,从1960年夏天德·鲁巴克最初出人意料地被任命为预备神学委员会的成员,到1965年12月大公会议的闭幕弥撒。这两卷包括了卢巴克自己编辑出版的六本会议笔记。尽管有这些修订,但《笔记本》通过德·卢卡克几乎每天都在记录会议事件的编年史,以前所未有的细节描绘了会议。《札记》的目标受众是少数学者,入学的智力成本很高。这些书不是针对一般读者的,甚至不是针对一般学术读者的。但是研究梵蒂冈二世、20世纪天主教和德·鲁巴克神学的学者们会在这些书中发现一个宝藏:天主教和福音派神学杂志
Book Review: Henri de Lubac, Vatican Council Notebooks: Volume 1 and Volume 2
“What will this Council be?” This is a question that Henri de Lubac (1896–1991) asked in anticipation of the opening of the Second Vatican Council (1962–1965). It is a question that remains apropos today nearly 60 years after the Council as historians and theologians consider the legacy of Vatican II and what it means for the Roman Catholic Church today. With the publication of the two volumes of de Lubac’s Vatican Council Notebooks, Ignatius Press offers anglophone scholars a new window for looking backward to the Council’s unfolding, development, and contested conclusions, as a way of looking forward to the ongoing work of renewing, revising, extending, and translating the Council’s accomplishments into our own day. The Notebooks cover a period of 5 years, from de Lubac’s initial—and surprising—appointment to the Preparatory Theological Commission in the summer of 1960 to the closing Mass of the Council in December of 1965. These two volumes include versions of de Lubac’s six council notebooks that de Lubac himself redacted for publication. Despite these redactions, the Notebooks depict the Council in unprecedented detail through de Lubac’s near-daily chronicle of conciliar happenings. The Notebooks are aimed at a narrow scholarly audience and the intellectual cost of admission is high. These are not aimed at a general readership, even a general scholarly readership. But scholars of Vatican II, 20th-century Catholicism, and de Lubac’s theology will find in these volumes a treasure 969885 PRE0010.1177/1063851220969885Pro Ecclesia: A Journal of Catholic and Evangelical TheologyBook Review book-review2020