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Disputed Truth: Memoirs II by Hans Kung
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Disputed Truth: Memoirs II (edition 2008)

by Hans Kung, James Bowden (Translator)

Series: Hans Küng Memoirs (2)

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Hans Küng has been a major influence on post-war Christianity by any reckoning. a peritus for the second Vatican council, he then went on to publish a number of controversial books, including Infallible?, which enraged the Vatican and caused him to lose the ecclesiastical approval of his teaching at the university of Tübingen. However, he remains a respected priest in good standing with his bishop. Throughout all the upheavals that the Catholic Church has undergone in recent decades, Küng has been an outspoken observer, turning himself from enfant terrible to béte noire. However his world influence has been great. Whether speaking at the United Nations or consorting with politicians and religious leaders, he is always listened to with respect and enthusiasm. A string of recent books has added to the reputation-notably On Being a Christian and Does God Exist? What is not so well known is that, as a young man, Küng was a close friend and confidant of Joseph Ratzinger (Benedict XVI). Over the years, however, they increasingly came to represent exactly what the other most despised. But on being appointed to the Holy See, Ratzinger had a long private meeting with Kung, the consequences of which may resonate within the Catholic Church for many years. In these thrilling memoirs Küng gives his personal account of all these struggles and ambitions. The result is a book of major importance for any student of the church in the 20th century. This second volume covers the period following the close of the Second Vatican Council right up to the present day.… (more)
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This book is the second biographical volume by Hans Kung covering his life following the Second Vatican Council in 1968 untill 1980. Kung was the best known and most widely read Catholic theologian of the 20th Century. Most of his career was spent as a professor of "Fundamental Theology" in the Catholic faculty at the University of Tubingen, West Germany. Though his self-described purpose in life was to help his fellow Catholics and Christians gain an understanding of the Christian Faith that was compatible with the intellectual milieu of the modern world, he probably is best known for challenging the Catholic doctrine of Infallibility and the classical Christology of the Catholic Church. Because of these challenges he was denied permission in 1979 to teach in the Catholic falculty of Tubingen University. Nevertheless he remained a priest of the Catholic Church and subsequently continued his career as a theologian, a proponent of a global ethic and a valued acquaintance of artists, politicians, other theologlians and religionists as well as a respected theologian for educated lay people throughout the Western world. ( )
  Jotto | Jun 17, 2022 |
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Hans Küng has been a major influence on post-war Christianity by any reckoning. a peritus for the second Vatican council, he then went on to publish a number of controversial books, including Infallible?, which enraged the Vatican and caused him to lose the ecclesiastical approval of his teaching at the university of Tübingen. However, he remains a respected priest in good standing with his bishop. Throughout all the upheavals that the Catholic Church has undergone in recent decades, Küng has been an outspoken observer, turning himself from enfant terrible to béte noire. However his world influence has been great. Whether speaking at the United Nations or consorting with politicians and religious leaders, he is always listened to with respect and enthusiasm. A string of recent books has added to the reputation-notably On Being a Christian and Does God Exist? What is not so well known is that, as a young man, Küng was a close friend and confidant of Joseph Ratzinger (Benedict XVI). Over the years, however, they increasingly came to represent exactly what the other most despised. But on being appointed to the Holy See, Ratzinger had a long private meeting with Kung, the consequences of which may resonate within the Catholic Church for many years. In these thrilling memoirs Küng gives his personal account of all these struggles and ambitions. The result is a book of major importance for any student of the church in the 20th century. This second volume covers the period following the close of the Second Vatican Council right up to the present day.

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