Differences

Milbank criticizes Hegel for the philosophical “error” in his “myth of negation.”  The issue is how difference arises, the logic of difference.  Milbank points to Leibniz by way of contrast, who “conceived logic as a ‘series,’ which unfolded by . . . . Continue Reading »

Anti-skepticisms

Milbank notes in Theology and Social Theory that there are two modern responses to skepticism.  One is the Cartesian view that “thinks of the known object both as something ‘beneath’ the subject, and so as under the subject’s control, like the instruments of technology, . . . . Continue Reading »

Local and Catholic

John Ratzinger offers this neat summary of the relation of local and universal church: “the Church is realized immediately and primarily in the individual local Churches which are not separate parts of a larger administrative organization but rather embody the totality of the reality which is . . . . Continue Reading »

Anamnesis and Anticipation

The Eucharist makes the church.  How? This is not the whole of the answer, but: Through anamnesis and anticipation.  Eucharist is a memorial of the death of Jesus; Eucharist is an anticipation of the marriage supper of the Lamb. The church is a people of shared time, of shared past and . . . . Continue Reading »

Night Passions

The woman of the Song of Songs is too overwhelmed with passion and longing for her man that she gets up from bed and roams around looking for him, until she can “arrest” him and bring him back home (3:1-5).  As Keel points out, her actions are not unlike the adulteress of Proverbs . . . . Continue Reading »

A Cheer for Vatican I

In a chapter on Yves Congar, Fergus Kerr (in Twentieth-Century Catholic Theologians ) says that the question of religious freedom had to be on the agenda for Vatican II because “it was a major issue inherited from the First Vatican Council.  It was even the major issue: the point of . . . . Continue Reading »

Eckhart, pantheist?

No, says Milbank.  But then he often sounds pantheistic, to his contemporaries as well as to us.  How does Milbank defend him?  Here’s what I think I’ve figured out: 1) God is transcendent, and this means (in Milbank’s Cusan theology) that He transcends oppositions; . . . . Continue Reading »

Analogy of Being

What should we say about the traditional notion of the analogy of being, rejected vigorously by the very different Reformed theologians, Karl Barth and Cornelius Van Til?  Some initial thoughts follow: 1) The Bible gets along just fine without saying God is “Being itself.”  So . . . . Continue Reading »

Homosexual Monogamy?

An article in the January 28, 2010 issue of the New York Times cites a study that indicates that, contrary to the defenses offered for a change in law, gay marriage does not nudge homosexuals toward monogamy: “A study to be released next month is offering a rare glimpse inside gay . . . . Continue Reading »

Aquinas the Foundationalist?

No, according to A.N. Williams, writing in New Blackfriars .  Williams defines foundationalism not only in terms of the structural distinction between basic and inferred propositions, but in telic terms: “the purpose of the non-inferred or basic propositions is to impart to the structure . . . . Continue Reading »