as all right-thinking people will want to and will encourage their friends to do, you will discover my indebtedness in there to people like Yves Congar, especially to his True and False Reform in the Church
There has been something of a recent revival in Congar studies, led in the last 18 months by small volumes such as Yves Congar: Essential Writings (Modern Spiritual Masters)
Later this month, we will have another publication devoted to Congar's ecclesiology: Anthony Oelrich, A Church Fully Engaged: Yves Congar's Vision of Ecclesial Authority (Liturgical Press, 2011), 176pp.
About this book the publisher says:
The French Dominican, Fr. Yves Congar, was deeply convinced that in the church’s ongoing tension with the secular world “it was led to adopt very much the same attitudes as the temporal power itself, to conceive of itself as a society, as a power, when in reality it was a communion, with ministers and servants.” It was Congar’s lifelong theological project to help restore to the church a more evangelical, gospel-based understanding of her life. From the vast corpus of this great expert of the Second Vatican Council, this book gathers his efforts as they pertain specifically to the issue of authority in the church. The often hot-button nature of any discussion on how authority is exercised in the church will only benefit from the retrieval of the theological tradition on this issue brought forth by Congar. Congar’s vision ultimately demands that our understanding of authority must flow from our understanding of God as a Trinity of Persons and, therefore, be practiced in the mutuality of relationship and always be directed at growth in authentic relationship.
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