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Keywords: Ignatius of Loyola
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Chapter
Published: 15 November 2007
... Ignatius of Loyola. Bea Cardinal Augustin S J ix Heschel Rabbi Abraham Joshua viii Jewish Christian relations Willebrands Jan Buber Martin Tannenbaum Rabbi Marc Auschwitz vii ix Judaism attitude toward the foreigner Paul VI Pope Weigel Gustave S J Hasidic tales Hasidism Nostra Aetate ix...
Chapter
Published: 01 November 2005
...This chapter examines how prayer can lead to an outside experience and turn those that pray into something other than that which they were. It analyzes relevant works of several philosophers including Jacques Derrida, Emmanuel Levinas, and Saint Ignatius of Loyola and suggests that prayer...
Chapter
Published: 19 November 2015
... of the novel, these two chapters address the problem at hand by examining the borderline persona of the idiot. This chapter begins with a consideration of Nietzsche and then traces this figure from Saint Paul via Cusanus, Descartes, and Ignatius of Loyola. Hegel G W F history idiot idiocy...
Chapter
Published: 02 November 2015
.... In this way, kethoprak becomes a popular form of participatory democracy. It also shares many characteristic elements with Ignatian Spirituality via Roland Barthes interpretation of the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius of Loyola. Susanto identifies in both...
Chapter
Published: 04 June 2024
... Ellen Tarry Friendship House Ignatius of Loyola racism Ellen Tarry and Ann Harrigan were pioneering Catholic social activists in the US during the middle decades of the twentieth century. Tarry and Harrigan are both remembered for their respective contributions to the pursuit of racial justice...
Chapter
Published: 01 April 2008
...This chapter discusses the Ignatian tradition, looking at the Spiritual Exercises and teachings of St. Ignatius of Loyola. It comments on four themes from the Spiritual Exercises that have particularly inspired twentieth-century theologians: seeking...
Chapter
Published: 15 December 2007
... things modern. Lonergan, Murray, and Rahner were also loyal sons of St. Ignatius of Loyola. They shared a certain Jesuit style encapsulated in the motto “finding God in all things”. Whether in the form of Lonergan's theological method, in Murray's reasoned defense of religious liberty, or in Rahner's...