scholarly journals Wskazania dla mnichów w "Komentarzu do Modlitwy Pańskiej" w "Regule mistrza"

Vox Patrum ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 69 ◽  
pp. 143-154
Author(s):  
Bogdan Czyżewski

The annonymous work called The Rule of the Master, in the so-called Thema, contains a commentary to the Lord’s Prayer. The Master, in his interpretion of invocation, touches the Christian doctrine. He analyse adopted sonship, which men is receiving by the Grace of God. This grace is a fruit of salvation given by Christ passover. Every Christian receives this grace in sacrament of baptism. First three request in Lord’s Prayer, although directed to God strictly, also refer to bound between man and Father. These prayers contains double dimension: theo­centric and antropocentric. First, these three request are leading to the God, and from Him, return to man to realize to him the obligations which are connected with the status: the child of God. Four next requests concer the specific needs of man, such as daily food, forgiveness, defense against the devil and temptations. We can not admit, that these four are focusing only on man. We can find in it also a deep theocentric feature. By directing these request to God, says The Master, man expect suport and help.

2019 ◽  
pp. 167-201 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anja Jetschke ◽  
Pascal Abb

This chapter addresses the authority of the United Nations Security Council and its politicization by the BRICS. In particular, it explores the patterns of contestation for the reform of the United Nations Security Council and the Responsibility to Protect. How do the BRICS position themselves towards these two issues and how do they justify their demands? Do they build a challengers’ coalition? Using, first, a qualitative analysis of BRICS statements and, second, congruence analysis, this chapter maps and explains the positions of BRICS states on UNSC reform and R2P. We find that BRICS’ individual positions show a convergence on the basic contours of UNSC reform and R2P. The contestation pattern clearly indicates that this group favours the UNSC having strong international authority and also that they share concerns about the liberal content of the UNSC. While there is a strong tendency towards convergence on the one hand, BRICS strongly disagree on the details of the reform of the UNSC—as well as on the implementation of R2P on the other. These differences are so strong that they are unlikely to be resolved in the near future. Congruence analysis shows that power transition theory best explains their agreement ‘in principle’, but that none of the available theories explain their disagreement ‘in detail’. We conclude that, as things stand, the BRICS do not pose a challenge to the status quo in governance within the field of international security.


1995 ◽  
Vol 48 (4) ◽  
pp. 489-506
Author(s):  
Richard Clutterbuck

Moltmann derives much of the power of his theology from his willingness to endure the tensions of paradox, a willingness signalled early in his career with the title of his work, The Crucified God. Such paradoxes, however, leave unanswered questions and the need for further explorations. It is the argument of this article that an aspect of Moltmann's theology in particular need of exploration is the area of the status of Christian doctrine and its appropriate development. There is a major tension, we will suggest, between the disavowal of‘doctrine’, ‘dogma’, ‘tradition’ and ‘system’ as helpful concepts, and the strongly doctrinal and systematic content of Moltmann's theology. This tension, we believe, has something to do with the ambivalence in Moltmann's attitude to the intellectual legacy of the Enlightenment, to ‘modernity’. We shall try to show that Moltmann operates with a mixture of internal criteria (based on key doctrines) and external criteria (based on perceived human needs) for assessing authenticity in doctrine. Finally, within the dynamic of Moltmann's theology, with what we shall identify as its emphasis on historicality, there are resources for advancing an account of the theological significance of the development of doctrine. We explore these and ask why Moltmann himself has not put them to greater use.


2021 ◽  
Vol 83 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 3-21
Author(s):  
Nils Arne Pedersen

In the baptismal ritual of the Danish Church, the Lord’s Prayer has since 1912 been placed after baptism while it formerly was placed before, as in Luther’s Taufbüchlein. Two consecutive articles argue that the replacement in 1912 was influenced by Nikolai Frederik Severin Grundtvig’s theology. The present second article deals with the different translations of Biblical passages central to the baptizee as a child of God, and attempts to demonstrate that Grundtvig identified the Lord’s Prayer with the Abba-cry mentioned in Romans 8:15 and Galatians 4:6. Thus, the Lord’s Prayer had its role to play after baptism and furthermore functioned for the believer as a daily confirmation and an inner assurance of salvation.  


2014 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 213-223 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victoria Freeman

Indigenous scholars and others have characterized Canadian discourses of reconciliation as supporting a top-down, government-defined and controlled agenda, which is at best ineffective and misleading and at worst fraudulent and recolonizing. Some have argued that reconciliation should only occur after the Indian Act has been abolished, reparations made, land and resources returned, and a political and economic nation-to-nation relationship restored. The author agrees that it is essential to look critically at state and nationalistic discourses of reconciliation and that neither the federal government, the churches, nor non-Indigenous peoples generally can or should control the agenda. However, while reconciliation is not a sufficient condition for decolonization in Canada, Indigenous resurgence on its own will not achieve full decolonization either. If the psychic structures of colonialism persist, various forms of neocolonialism will be prevalent even after a nominal “nation-to-nation” relationship has been established, given the demographic imbalance and geographical proximity between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples. There will always be a need for relationship and negotiation.In fact, decolonization and reconciliation may be understood as complementary and concurrent processes. The concept of reconciliation underlines the emotional, psychological and human changes that are as necessary as political and economic reformulations for decolonization and that are not easily addressed by other means. Rather than a top-down government-initiated campaign focused on assimilation into the status quo or a Eurocentric Christian doctrine focused on forgiveness, reconciliation can be a transformative process of building the relationships, alliances and social understandings necessary to support the systemic changes that true decolonization entails. Indigenous and other cultural paradigms for resolving conflicts, making restitution and healing relationships, such as the Sto:lo concept of lummi or “facing yourself,” can help restore interconnectedness and reciprocity at all levels, both within Indigenous communities and between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples and the land. We also should not overestimate the government’s power to control even those reconciliation processes it does initiate, let alone those that arise autonomously. Decolonization and reconciliation are processes underway on many fronts in Canada, and they can’t be controlled by anyone.


1949 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 16-34
Author(s):  
Magnus Stevns

Grundtvig and Kingo's Hymns. By Magnus Stevns When Grundtvig began writing hymns he definitely took Thomas Kingo, the greatest Danish hymn-writer of the 17th century, as his model. From childhood Grundtvig had loved “ Kingos Salmebog” (“ Kingo’s Hymn-book” , 1699) and the living interpretation of Bible history which its hymns contained. He was therefore in dire distress when as a clergyman he was obliged to use the new so-called “ Evangelisk christelig Psalmebog” (“ Evangelical Christian Hymnbook”, 1798), a book of extremely poor quality from both the Christian and the poetic point of view. Kingo’s hymns on the Passion, describing the sufferings and death of Jesus with intense feeling, and his genuinely Lutheran hymns about the battle against the Devil, the world and our flesh which the child of God has to fight, were replaced by insipid moral verses about the Christian virtues. Lifeless abstract terminology was universally substituted for the concrete, personal phraseology of the Bible, e. g., “evil” instead of “ the Evil one” or “ the Devil” , “ the Lord God” instead of the personal “ thy Saviour”. Grundtvig wished to renew Danish hymn-writing with the support of what was best in the past; but in spite of his love for Kingo’s hymns, with their historical stamp and evangelical imagery, he found it necessary, partly to shorten most of them, and partly to alter those things in them which did not agree with his own conception of Christianity. In Grundtvig’s adaptations of Kingo’s hymns one notices how he tones down or omits Kingo’s forceful descriptions of the humiliation and mocking of Jesus; while Kingo dwells chiefly on the sufferings of Good Friday, and pictures the agony of Jesus as He drank the cup of God’s anger to the dregs, for Grundtvig the central point is the victory over death which Jesus won for us, and His rising again to life for us. In Grundtvig’s opinion, Kingo’s hymns overstress the distance between God and man; Grundtvig stresses the view that in baptism the Christian comes into fellowship with God and thereby has received grace and has shared in the Atonement. Nor can Grundtvig share Kingo’s conception of the death of the body as a release which helps the soul out of the body’s wretched “worm-bag”. In Grundtvig’s view death is the last enemy which we shall overcome with God’s help, and therefore the Christian hope attaches itself first and foremost to the risen Saviour. In his revision of Kingo Grundtvig usually preserves his intonation and many words and images, but in other respects permits himself such extensive alterations that the poet Ingemann, with good reason, was obliged to say of i t : “ However closely akin to Kingo’s your spirit may be, I find that your strongly-marked characteristics will not blend together with his sufficiently to prevent me from hearing now the voice of one, now that of the other” . All the same Grundtvig often shows himself as the remodeller with a touch of genius, who not only remodels the hymn, but makes a new creation of it (this is the case with Grundtvig’s “ I Nasareth, i trange Kaar”, “ In Nasareth, in needy state” ). In many cases Grundtvig’s relation to Kingo’s hymns is one of reaction rather than of imitation, as may be seen from a comparison between Kingo’s “ Kommer, I som vil ledsage” (“Come, ye who will accompany. . . ” ) and Grundtvig’s “Tag det sorte Kors fra Graven!” (“ Take the black cross from the grave!” . . . ). Here Grundtvig “sings against” Kingo almost line by line. In one of his best known poems, “ Jeg kender et Land” (“ I know a land” — later rewritten as the hymn “ O Kristelighed”, “ O Christian faith!”), Grundtvig uses the metre which Kingo employed in his great hymn “ Far Verden Farvel” (“ Farewell to the world” ), but for Kingo’s renunciation of the life of the world Grundtvig substitutes his positive confession of faith in God’s kingdom of love. The relation between the two hymn-writers may be summed up thus: both constantly seek for union with the Deity through an imitation which — though feebly — makes the way of man resemble that of the Deity. But for Kingo the Deity Himself, Who is God and man, is most human (and therefore capable of being imitated) before Golgotha, and most divine (far removed from man) after the Resurrection, while the opposite is the case with Grundtvig, for whom the Risen One is “ flesh in heaven, spirit on earth”. For Grundtvig it would be unreasonable to believe that man’s powers were equal to imitating the Deity, “ Christ, Who died upon the cross”, before he could imitate the man, “ Jesus, Who rose from the grave”. Kingo reaches the following conclusion: “ Only when by death I truly bid the world farewell, then only shall I be at home with God,” while Grundtvig arrives at another, namely: “ Only when God is at home in me, then only can I truly bid the world farewell.” When Kingo has first learnt to know the power of Jesus’ Passion, he will afterwards learn to know the community and fellowship of His Resurrection. But Grundtvig says, “The Lord wishes all who believe in Him to learn to know the power of His Resurrection before they feel themselves called to the community and fellowship of His sufferings.” (Cp. Philipp, ch. 3, v. 10.) Therefore it is the first task of Grundtvig’s hymns to renew the song of praise to the risen Saviour, who through the Holy Spirit is present in the Church; in Grundtvig’s hymns it is Whitsun before it is Easter. But Grundtvig (as he himself stresses) has not “ concealed the fact that Our Lord Jesus Christ in His Passion and death must stand for us both as our Saviour and as our example”. In Grundtvig’s poetic activity this gives rise to “a song of the secret chamber”, which sounds more subdued, but in purity & depth of tone excels both the festal hymns of “ Sangværket” (“The Hymn-Book” ) and Kingo’s “ trumpet songs” .


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1968 ◽  
Vol 41 (5) ◽  
pp. 944-944
Author(s):  
T. E. C.

Kanner, more than anyone else, has called our attention to the gradual but slow and halting emergence of compassion and concern on the part of churchmen, philosophers, philanthropists, physicians, and politicians toward the mentally retarded. It may come as a surprise to learn that it was during the "enlightenment" and "reform" of the sixteenth and seventeeth centuries that the treatment of mental defectives was at its worst. It was during this period that many of them became victims of the prevailing demonism. Martin Luther referred to the feeble-minded as godless and reported this occurrence in one of his Table Talks:1 Eight years ago, there was one in Dessau whom I, Martinus Luther, saw and grappled with. He was twelve years old, had the use of his eyes and all his senses, so that one might think he was a normal child. But he did nothing but gorge himself as much as four peasants or threshers. He ate, defecated, and drooled and, if anyone tackled him, he screamed. If things didn't go well, he wept. So I said to the Prince of Anhalt: "If I were the Prince, I should take the child to the Moldau River which flows near Dessau and drown him." But the Prince of Anhalt and the Prince of Saxony, who happened to be present, refused to follow my advice. Thereupon I said; "Well, then the Christians shall order the Lord's Prayer to be said in church and pray that the dear Lord take the Devil away." This was done daily in Dessau and the changeling died in the following year.


2001 ◽  
Vol 17 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Hoberman

Diskussion af Verner Møllers bog 'Dopingdjævelen' - om dopingskandaler og Tour de France i slutningen af 1990'erne.The Reception of Dopingdjævlen (The Devil of Dope) (1999) in Denmark)The publication of Verner Møller’s Dopingdjævlen a year after the 1998 Tour de France scandal was in itself a kind of media event that gave the doping debate in Denmark an analytical dimension that is usually lacking in public discussions of this topic. The fact that an academic intellectual had succeeded in entering the public discussion of athletic doping in an original, heretical and highly publicized manner provoked a reaction that can teach us much about the status of “doping” in modern societies that consume large quantities of “legitimate” drugs. For one of the consequences of reading Verner Møller’s book was to be confronted with the uncomfortable possibility that the drug use of professional cyclists was not, in some respects, fundamentally different from the drug use of millions of people who regard their own pharmacological habits as being both normal and legitimate.


Author(s):  
Richard H. Roberts

Kant’s critique of the limits of the knowable and the status of the self in relation to God ceded a marginal role lying outside scientific knowledge. The Christian doctrine of God as Trinity was both conserved and marginalized. Schleiermacher and Ritschl subjected the doctrine of God to major reinterpretation. Hegel’s account of the doctrine of the Trinity is part of a diachronic ontology and epistemology patterned by, but radically at variance with, the synchronic Kantian critique and an ambiguous achievement. The dialectical fragmentation of Hegel’s thought following his death in 1831 informed the nineteenth century, and flows through the twentieth into the twenty-first century. eResponses to Christian thought on God include Schelling, Marx, Feuerbach, Kierkegaard and Nietzsche, historians of dogma and theologians from Harnack and Troeltsch to Barth and Andresen, an array of twentieth-century thinkers and theologians, besides second- and third-wave feminism and post-colonial critique.


1991 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Spoelstra

The Heidelberg Catechism originated in 1563 in the Paltz by political authority of the head of state for the purpose of education in schools and for general religious instruction. This document received the status of an official doctrinal creed (confession of faith) in the churches in the Netherlands at the Synod of 's-Gravenhage in 1586. Unity of faith as confessed determined the being of the church and ecclesiastical unity. The same synod therefore prescribed weekly preaching of the main content of the Christian doctrine and referred to the chapters of the Heidelberg Catechism as agenda for this purpose. The Church Order (art. 68) still maintains this prescription for the GKSA today. A lack of understanding of the real meaning and purpose of doctrinal preaching gave rise to a wrong perception that the Catechism as such is ordered by ecclesiastical authority to be preached. In this article it is asserted that in the so called ‘catechism-sermon' more than one pericope from Scripture should be used in context - rather than to focus on text in isolation - to highlight a certain section in the Heidelberg Catechism. In homiletics this kind of sermon should also be treated according to its own genre in homiletics.


Author(s):  
Sihar Pandapotan

This study is about cross-nation  marriage aiming to understand the factors of cross-nation marriage happened, understand the difficulties in parenting pattern introduced in cross-nation marriage, understand how the implication of daily life’s pattern applied, and understand the difficulties faced by the parents who come from different cultural backgrounds in running household. Meanwhile the result of this study is that there were many differences in pattern of life which is applied in their families, starting from the language used in daily, food consumed, and the way of thinking in their families. Although the status of citizenship of the foreign citizens were the same from the several families studied, in running their lifes, there were some differences based on their personalities and neighborhoods, some were ease to assimilated with the society around, some were hard to adapt with the society and the cultures of Indonesia, in general. Moreover, the general difference between west culture and east culture is the west culture tends to own more freedom and the east culture tends to limit the freedom of a child in having a decision. According to these phenomena, the author could see how their interactions with the society in the neighborhood were, how their status were, how their behavior in practicing the custom and culture and pattern of daily life was. In this study, the author used the qualitative method as a reference to get the data significantly from the main informants. Furthermore, the author used the technique of collecting data by interviewing to get the more comprehensive data.


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