Karren Kilby on KARL RAHNER

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  • Опубликовано: 30 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 11

  • @ralph7545
    @ralph7545 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you Karen Kilby.

  • @alskndlaskndal
    @alskndlaskndal 5 лет назад +3

    I'm intrigued by what I've learned of Rahner. I'd like to know if he described any specific spiritual practices to experience his philosophy in one's life. This is something that I appreciate about some Eastern religions, is the instruction of a path to enlightenment. Christian theology can at times feel overly cerebral and disembodied.

  • @vaska1999
    @vaska1999 9 месяцев назад

    The last point is absolutely traditional in Orthodox theology.

  • @sapientianulliformis
    @sapientianulliformis 15 лет назад +5

    Prof. Kilby explains the Vorgriff well and rightly critiques misinterpretations of Rahner. However, her portrayal of the traditional nature/grace distinction is worse than a caricature; it's inaccurate. It's not a matter simply of whether you can experience grace in your concrete life; it's whether the grace received is SUPERnatural, raising one up. Rahner maintains the distinction; he simply explains nature's openness to receiving grace more positively via the Vorgriff concept.

    • @andrelefebvre5453
      @andrelefebvre5453 4 года назад

      Have you seen a more correct presentation of the concept in video or audio form (podcast, conference, etc)? Thank you, I'm very interested in exploring this apprehension of being further, but I don't read books much anymore, preferring the audio format. Is she doing a better job here: ruclips.net/video/ZWeqGTaxJFM/видео.html&ab_channel=UniversityofNottingham

  • @dannydoj
    @dannydoj 2 года назад

    Rahner was lost in a world of subjectivity. A true Modernist, he clearly contradicted the plain sense of Scripture that Christ was physically raised from the dead and that we ourselves will rise in our present bodies to share God’s Glory.

    • @vaska1999
      @vaska1999 9 месяцев назад +2

      You might want to reread the pertinent texts yourself. According to Saint Paul, Christ was raised a *spiritual* body, not a physical.

    • @robertwansink4996
      @robertwansink4996 Месяц назад

      @@vaska1999 The body in which Christ died on the cross is the same body he rose in on the third day.