
Contents
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Renewal and Engagement Renewal and Engagement
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Periodization Periodization
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Common Themes and Creative Tensions Common Themes and Creative Tensions
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The “Human” The “Human”
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Action Action
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The “Concrete” The “Concrete”
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Questioning Orthodoxy Questioning Orthodoxy
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Engagement Engagement
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Renewal Renewal
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Summaries of Chapters Summaries of Chapters
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Cite
Extract
As body, man is a being whose condition it is always to be communicated; indeed, he regains himself only on account of having been communicated. For this reason, man as a whole is not an archetype of Being and of Spirit, rather their image; he is not the primal word, but a response; he is not a speaker, but an expression governed by the laws of beauty, laws which man cannot impose on himself. As a totality of spirit and body, man must make himself into God’s mirror and seek to attain to that transcendence and radiance that must be found in the world’s substance if it is indeed God’s image and likeness—his word and gesture, action and drama.
Hans Urs von Balthasar, The Glory of the Lord
We understand that there is a dialectic of realism … such a realism consists not as a doctrine, but rather as an effort; and it purports less to resolve problems than to first see them clearly. It is the presence of this notion of a dialectic that explains … “toward the concrete.” The concrete will never be the given for the philosopher. It will be the pursued. It is only in the absence of thought that the concrete can reveal itself to us.
Jean Wahl, Vers le concret (Toward the Concrete)
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