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Bernhard Häring (1912–1998)

Author of Shalom: Peace - The Sacrament of Reconciliation

214+ Works 2,257 Members 49 Reviews

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Series

Works by Bernhard Häring

Shalom: Peace - The Sacrament of Reconciliation (1968) — Author — 106 copies, 1 review
The Law of Christ [3-volume set] (1969) 88 copies, 1 review
Medical Ethics (1973) 54 copies
A Sacramental Spirituality (1965) — Author — 53 copies, 1 review
What Does Christ Want? (1968) — Author — 43 copies, 1 review
Hope is the Remedy (1972) — Author — 42 copies, 1 review
Sin in the secular age (1974) 37 copies
Evangelization Today (1974) 34 copies, 1 review
The Healing Power of Peace and Nonviolence (1986) 32 copies, 1 review
Christian Maturity: Holiness in Today's World (1983) — Author — 30 copies, 1 review
A Theology of Protest (1970) — Author — 30 copies, 1 review
Morality is for Persons: The Ethics of Christian Personalism (1971) — Author — 30 copies, 1 review
The Liberty of the Children of God (1966) — Author — 30 copies, 1 review
The Johannine Council: Witness to Unity (1963) — Author — 29 copies, 1 review
Acting on the Word (1975) — Author — 28 copies, 1 review
My Witness for the Church (1901) 25 copies, 3 reviews
The Eucharist and our everyday life (1978) 22 copies, 1 review
This time of salvation (1966) 22 copies
In pursuit of holiness (1982) 20 copies
Heart of Jesus: Symbol of Redeeming Love (1983) 18 copies, 1 review
Celebrating joy (1970) 18 copies
Road to relevance (1970) — Author — 15 copies, 1 review
Our Father (1996) 15 copies
The New Covenant (1962) 13 copies
Confession and Happiness (1990) — Author — 12 copies, 1 review
Proclaiming joy (1970) 7 copies
Called to Holiness (1982) 6 copies
Love is the Answer (1970) 6 copies
Toward a Christian Moral Theology Vol 2 (1966) — Author — 3 copies, 1 review
The church on the move (1970) 2 copies
La moral y la persona (1973) 1 copy, 1 review
Omschakelen op vrede (1983) 1 copy

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Reviews

57 reviews
This book made me nervous. While I have been formed intellectually by many themes of existentialism (see my review of The Committed Self), the existential emphasis on individualism is troublesome, theologically. The Christian is never a mere individual, but a member of an interdependent body with Christ at the head holding his body (along with the whole created order) together.

These four lectures, from one of the formulators of the ecumenism of Vatican II, quickly put my fears to rest. The show more very first lecture differentiates Personalism (Häring’s viewpoint) from mere Individualism. Individualistic existentialism embraced in various forms by Heidegger, Sartre, and de Beauvoir “aims at man’s stepping out of an anonymous existence and emerging from himself in true being-one’s own” (22). Fully developed personalism, on the other hand, portrays a person who steps out of anonymous existence as a mere functionary in a technological machine into communities of love where “he once again feels himself a man in the full sense of the word, i.e., he becomes a person” (9). This Personalism is fundamentally Christian: “a personalism of encounter and community in word and love” (11).

The second and third lectures discuss the intertwined ideas of morality, conscience and freedom. “The fully developed Christian conscience,” writes Häring, “is inseparable from a loving regard for one’s neighbor and a presence before God in faith and love” (57).

The final lecture, “A Christian Existentialism in the Perspective of Salvation History,” was a compelling exposition of the Christian virtue of prudence. The word prudence today is closely associated with the pejorative epithet “prude,” as in someone who has limited their freedom. Häring takes a richer view. Prudence is “the art of adapting our action to the redemptive actions of Christ within the whole history of salvation and in the context of a present salvific community.” Prudence is nothing less than an attentive alignment with the kairos of God’s pneumatic presence in the world.

Existentialism embraces a broad gamut of thought from Nietzsche to Buber. Häring shows that existentialism and Christianity not only fit together, they enable thoughtful Christians to reflect deeply on the their existence and responsibility before God.
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Advisory: This book presents a critical theological reflection on the challenges and responsibilities of priestly ministry. Written by a Catholic moral theologian, it engages honestly with issues in the Church while remaining grounded in Catholic teaching.

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Statistics

Works
214
Also by
1
Members
2,257
Popularity
#11,362
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
49
ISBNs
166
Languages
8

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