This article considers the relationship between Vatican II’s Decree on the Church’s Missionary Activity (Ad Gentes) and its Declaration on Non-Christian Religions (Nostra Aetate) as a way of better understanding both documents and examining the theology of Vatican II. Following the council’s conclusion there was a sense among many that these texts were fundamentally incompatible. However, examining the perceived tension between them illumines the reality that their teachings are not competitive, but are rooted in the same dynamic notion of God’s grace. As the 50th anniversary of the council nears it is important to reexamine the relationship between these documents as a way of advancing critical questions about the council’s interpretation ...
This article engages the on-going debate over the interpretation of Vatican II\u27s documents. It ar...
It has been ten years since cardinal William Levada – the prefect of the Congregation for the Doctri...
Vatican II began to heal three major divisions: the division within Roman Catholicism itself, the di...
This article considers the relationship between Vatican II’s Decree on the Church’s Missionary Activ...
This article critically evaluates what Vatican II taught about other living faiths in four documents...
It has been widely accepted that the Second Vatican Council could be seen as a milestone in the hist...
Before investigating whether the Second Vatican Council agreed that ‘other’ living faiths can in som...
Nostra aetate began as an important statement concerning the relations of the Church with the Jews b...
The Second Vatican Council (1962–1965) is regarded as one of the most significant processes in the e...
The article contributes to the ecumenical debate on the relationship between the Church of Christ an...
In 1965, at the end of Vatican II, the Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World \u27G...
50 years ago (Dec 8, 1965), at the conclusion of Vatican II, the greatest event marking the life of ...
The article presents the significant development of theological and biblical thinking since the begi...
This article examines John Paul II’s understanding of the universal work of the Holy Spirit and the ...
The Second Vatican Council was an event of conversion for the participating bishops, and the council...
This article engages the on-going debate over the interpretation of Vatican II\u27s documents. It ar...
It has been ten years since cardinal William Levada – the prefect of the Congregation for the Doctri...
Vatican II began to heal three major divisions: the division within Roman Catholicism itself, the di...
This article considers the relationship between Vatican II’s Decree on the Church’s Missionary Activ...
This article critically evaluates what Vatican II taught about other living faiths in four documents...
It has been widely accepted that the Second Vatican Council could be seen as a milestone in the hist...
Before investigating whether the Second Vatican Council agreed that ‘other’ living faiths can in som...
Nostra aetate began as an important statement concerning the relations of the Church with the Jews b...
The Second Vatican Council (1962–1965) is regarded as one of the most significant processes in the e...
The article contributes to the ecumenical debate on the relationship between the Church of Christ an...
In 1965, at the end of Vatican II, the Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World \u27G...
50 years ago (Dec 8, 1965), at the conclusion of Vatican II, the greatest event marking the life of ...
The article presents the significant development of theological and biblical thinking since the begi...
This article examines John Paul II’s understanding of the universal work of the Holy Spirit and the ...
The Second Vatican Council was an event of conversion for the participating bishops, and the council...
This article engages the on-going debate over the interpretation of Vatican II\u27s documents. It ar...
It has been ten years since cardinal William Levada – the prefect of the Congregation for the Doctri...
Vatican II began to heal three major divisions: the division within Roman Catholicism itself, the di...