Discerning the Mystery
Posts from my reading of Andrew Louth’s Discerning the Mystery. An Essay on the Nature of Theology ( March – August 2008)
More on Discerning the Mystery
Chapter I: Dissociation of Sensibility
- Louth on the division in theology
- Louth on Christian prayer
- The Fathers on theologia (quote only)
- Our alienation from the past: Louth on division, method and history
- Our alienation from the past: A patristic postscript (comment)
Chapter II: The Legacy of the Enlightenment
Chapter III: Science and Mystery
- Louth on Science and Mystery I
- Louth on Science and Mystery II
- Louth on Science and Mystery III
- Louth on Science and Mystery IV: Tacit knowledge and the Fathers
- Hort on the traditions of the hour (quote only)
- Hort on perceiving truth (quote only)
Chapter IV: Tradition and the Tacit
- Louth on Tradition and the Tacit I: Augustine on paideia
- Louth on Tradition and the Tacit II: A faith received
- Louth on Tradition and the Tacit III: Tradition as the life of the Holy Spirit in the Church
- Louth on Tradition and the Tacit IV: Lossky and Saint Ignatius on silence
- Some reflections on Tradition and the Tacit I: Is there a place for a hermeneutic of suspicion? (My reflection)
- Tradition and the Tacit: Some reflections, II: Liturgy and inarticulateness (My reflection)
- To be something… (quote only)
Chapter V: Return to Allegory
- Louth on the Return to Allegory I: the fatal combination of sola scriptura and historical criticism
- Louth on the Return to Allegory II: Reading as being engaged across the gulf of history
- Louth on the Return to Allegory III: holding us before the mystery of Scripture
- Louth on the Return to Allegory IV: allegory as the fulfilment of history
- Louth on the Return to Allegory V: Restoring a lost unity
- The return to Allegory: Some reflections on allegory and hermeneutics (my reflection)
Chapter VI: Living the Mystery