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Mysterium/Mystery
(2,452 words)
[German Version] I. Catholic Theology – II. Orthodox Theology – III. Protestant Theology
I. Catholic Theology The semantic field of
mysterium in Catholic theology exhibits two characteristic poles; though they cannot be separated, there is some tension in their relationship. One pole is the dialectic of God's revelation and hiddenness in his action of revelation and salvation. This semantic pole has its roots in the biblical use of the term (esp. in the Pauline, deutero-Pauline, and trito-Pauline ¶ material), but it is still dominant in formal scholastic usage in the 1…
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Religion Past and Present
Pay and Reward
(2,609 words)
[German Version]
I. Dogmatics That human beings should receive payment as agreed remuneration for labor is in line, according to Old Testament law, with the will of God (Gen 29:15; Deut 24:14f.; Zech 8:10). The New Testament knows that laborers are worthy of their hire (1 Tim 5:18; cf. Luke 10:7; Matt 20:8). When the rich withhold or delay payment, this is a sin crying out before God (Jer 22:13; Jas 5:4). The NT recognizes “payment for unrighteousness” as punishment for an act of betrayal (Acts 1:18), or for dishonest and grasping money-making (2 Pet 2:13, 15). In a figurative sense, paymen…
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Religion Past and Present
Mariology
(2,940 words)
[German Version] I. History – II. Systematic Theology
I. History The term “Mariology,” used to refer to theological interest in the Mother of Jesus Christ (Mary) − and to the systematic subdiscipline of dogmatics that developed out of this interest − first appeared in the title of the work
Summa sacrae Mariologiae by Placido Nigido (Palermo 1602, 21623); the variant “Marialogy” was introduced by Vincent Contenson (see below) in 1669. Thereafter, the concept disappeared until the 19th century. The matter itself has, for christological reasons, been t…
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Religion Past and Present
Conciliar Theory
(1,651 words)
[German Version] I. Church History – II. Dogmatics – III. Church Law
I. Church History Conciliarism (conciliar theory) is the doctrine that the general council is the highest ecclesial authority such that even the pope is subject to its supremacy. Its roots lie primarily in the discussions of medieval canon law concerning the relationship between papal immunity and responsibility. A discussion concerning the relationship of the infallibility of the church promised Peter (Matt 16:18) to …
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Religion Past and Present
France, Theology in
(2,551 words)
[German Version] I. 19th century – II. 20th century
I. 19th century Not until the 19th century did a distinctive French theology appear. French theology of the 19th century reflects the memory of the French Revolution (1789) as well as the unanswered questions of the Enlightenment (Voltaire, D. Diderot, J.-J. Rousseau).
1. Catholic Theology For the Catholic Church, the new situation meant the end of Gallicanism, which had long united church, theology, and state against the Roman papacy. In 1791 Pius VI condemned the principles of the Revolution, …
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Religion Past and Present