Fr. 210.00

Material Eucharist

Inglese · Copertina rigida

Spedizione di solito entro 3 a 5 settimane

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Zusatztext [T]his is a book that I judge will be indispensable for all those writing henceforth about Eucharistic theology, both because of what Grumett affirms and for the responses which he evokes. He succeeds triumphantly in showing that the Eucharist is the coming of Christ in embodied form in the embodied lives of those who receive him, drawing them deeper into the whole created world. Informationen zum Autor Dr David Grumett is Chancellor's Fellow at the University of Edinburgh. His publications include, Theology on the Menu: Asceticism, Meat and Christian Diet (with Rachel Muers; Routledge, 2010) and De Lubac: A Guide for the Perplexed (T & T Clark, 2007). Klappentext This work surveys and identifies the most important liturgical and theological texts from the biblical, Patristic, medieval, Reformation, and modern periods in order to understand how the Eucharist has shaped, and been shaped by, texts, ritual, and doctrine. Zusammenfassung Material Eucharist interprets the Eucharist through its material elements of bread and wine. Drawing upon a rich variety of biblical, patristic, medieval, and modern texts and traditions, David Grumett brings together theological reflection and liturgical action and shows their mutual dependence. For both theologians and liturgists, a central concern is the matter out of which the created order has been made, from which issues of community and social justice are inseparable. The ingredients of bread and wine anticipate, in their harvesting and manufacture, the formal church liturgy, which is extended back into the world by the transformative priestly action of laypeople. Indeed, the transforming presence of Christ in the Eucharist as flesh and substance is theologically grounded in his transformative presence in the wider created order, as expressed in eucharistic giving and exchange between churches and their wider communities. Rooting the Eucharist in materiality suggests its primary context to be the death and resurrection of Christ in the power of the Spirit, in which its recipients may share. The many aspects of theology and liturgy with which the book deals have large implications for how the Eucharist is understood in a range of academic disciplines, and for how it is celebrated in churches today. Inhaltsverzeichnis Abbreviations Introduction 1.1 Transformations of Nature 1.2 Grain 1.3 Salt 1.4 Olive Oil 1.5 Water 1.6 Leaven 1.7 Baking 1.8 Grape and Vine 1.9 Conclusion 2.1  Silence and Representation 2.2  On Earth as in Heaven 2.3  Life and Sacrifice 2.4  Communing 2.5  Priesthood, Matter, and Transformation 2.6  Conclusion 3.1  The Host as Talisman 3.2  Christ the Preserver 3.3  Christ the Bond of Substance 3.4  The World as Altar 3.5  The Altar, the World, and God s Body 3.6  Conclusion 4.1  Matter and Transformation 4.2  Assimilating Flesh 4.3  The Council of Trent: Tradition and Innovation 4.4  The Eucharist and Aristotle 4.5  Alternatives to Transubstantiation 4.6  Union in the Eucharist and in Christ 4.7  Conclusion 5.1  Viaticum 5.2  Eucharistic Burial 5.3  The Dead at the Altar 5.4  Raised by the Spirit 5.5  The Spirit in Recent Eucharistic Prayers 5.6  Conclusion 6.1  The Host and the Hearth 6.2  The Fermentum 6.3  Piety and Grace 6.4  Participation and Consumption 6.5  Eulogia 6.6  Bread, Community, and Church 6.7  Conclusion 7.1  The Holy Spirit, Baptism, and Eucharist 7.2  Spiritual Ascent 7.3  Ascending and Descending 7.4  Spirit and Matter 7.5  Conclusion Epilogue Select Bibliography Index ...

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