Karl Rahner believed that, ideally, the arts should “become an intrinsic moment of theology itself.” Unsurprisingly, the German Jesuit theologian looked to culture as a source for divine illumination.
In 1950, the renowned German theologian and theological peritus at the Second Vatican Council, Jesuit Fr. Karl Rahner, published a short article titled, "A Faith That Loves the Earth," in the journal ...
For many Roman Catholic clerics at the Second Vatican Council, the most vital arena was not St. Peter’s Basilica, where the prelates gathered for discussion, but a room on the third floor of Rome’s ...
T. 76, Fasc. 4, Habitar as Fronteiras do Pensamento: Os Jesuítas e a Filosofia do Séc. XX / Inhabiting the Frontiers of Thought: The Contribution of Jesuit Philosophers to 20th Century Philosophy ...
Karl Rahner continues to be discussed even 40 years after his death. Born on March 5, 1904, in Freiburg, Breisgau, Germany, he entered the Society of Jesus on April 20, 1922, and died on March 30, ...
Since Karl Rahner popularized the idea of the mysticism of ordinary life several decades ago, it has become conventional to think about mysticism, not as a rare possibility of paranormal experience ...