Sacramental Theology: Theory and Practice from Multiple Perspectives
A special issue of Religions (ISSN 2077-1444).
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (1 August 2019) | Viewed by 45985
Special Issue Editor
Special Issue Information
In the second half of the twentieth century, sacrament emerged as a vital topic within the ressourcement movements of Western European Catholic theology. Scholarship attentive to multiple sources in early Christianity—philosophical, homiletic, liturgical, pastoral—rescued sacramental symbol and ritual from merely being the object of clerical ministration, passive lay reception, and canonical regulation to becoming a key to understanding divine-human encounter in the mission of the church and the lives of its members. Recovering the ancient, as well as best of medieval, theology of sacramental rites as sacred mysteries, European and North American theologians enlisted contemporary phenomenological and hermeneutical philosophies to explain and promote sacraments not as clerically delivered objects but, rather, as profound human symbolic events of divine revelation. By the turn of the twenty-first century the need for attention to the actual performance of specific rites (and thus, the need for historical, social-scientific, and other human disciplines in addition to philosophy) had become well established. This now makes the work of sacramental theology an ongoing attention to multi-or-cross-disciplinary theories attentive to actual contexts (historical and contemporary) of sacramental-liturgical practices. Insofar as Christian sacraments only exist in symbolic-ritual performances, the field of liturgical studies (itself multidisciplinary, including ritual and performance theories) has proven increasingly integral to sacramental-theological work. Attention to historical and actual practices of Christian symbol and ritual (liturgy and sacraments) nonetheless returns continuously to philosophical-theological theories that meet the intellectual need to reflect upon divine presence and absence, personal and communal experiences of God, of Christ, of the Spirit, scripture and tradition, the ecclesial or communal dimension of sacramental celebrations, types of power at work in the rites, liturgical participation, etc. Thus, sacramental theology proves expansive in the range of Christian existence it addresses, even as the bodily nature of the subject matter requires constant theoretical reconsiderations attentive to historical, social, and cultural contexts.
Dear Colleagues,
From the second half of the twentieth century sacramental theology has continued to evolve as a discipline advancing both comprehensive theories (theologies) of sacraments and sacramentality as integral to the nature and practice of Christianity and studies of particular rites in their historical, social, cultural, and embodied contexts. By the turn of the twenty-first century the need for attention to the actual performance of specific rites (and thus, the need for historical, social-scientific, and other human disciplines in addition to philosophy) had become well established. This now makes the work of sacramental theology an ongoing attention to multi-or-cross-disciplinary theories attentive to actual contexts (historical and contemporary) of sacramental-liturgical practices. Insofar as Christian sacraments only exist in symbolic-ritual performances, the field of liturgical studies (itself multidisciplinary, including ritual and performance theories) has proven increasingly integral to sacramental-theological work. Attention to historical and actual practices of Christian symbol and ritual (liturgy and sacraments) nonetheless returns continuously to philosophical-theological theories that meet the intellectual need to reflect upon the divine-human encounter both within ecclesial rites themselves and across the range of bodily (physical, cultural, traditional) ways Christians practice their faith in the world. This special issue of Religions invites scholars to contribute further to the sacramental theology by any of the above, ever-evolving, disciplinary approaches (or combinations thereof). Articles may address the concept of sacrament comprehensively or through focus on particular rites (in historical or contemporary contexts, or combinations thereof).
Prof. Dr. Bruce Morrill
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- sacraments
- sacramentality
- liturgy
- phenomenology
- symbols
- ritual
- Christianity
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