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    Moral Theology at the End of the Century

    Posted By: tot167
    Moral Theology at the End of the Century

    Charles E. Curran, “Moral Theology at the End of the Century”
    Marquette Univ Pr | 1999-03 | ISBN: 0874625793 | 66 pages | PDF | 1,8 MB

    The title of this lecture makes no claim to originality.
    The title comes from an influential article written by
    Thomas J. Bouquillon in 1899—"Moral Theology
    at the End of the Nineteenth Century."1 In that
    article Bouquillon, the first holder of the Chair of
    Moral Theology at The Catholic University of
    America, deals with the deficiencies of moral theology
    at the time and makes suggestions for the
    renewal of moral theology.

    At the end of the twentieth century as a moral
    theologian in the United States, I welcome the
    opportunity to use the prestigious Pére Marquette
    Lecture to address the analogous topic of moral
    theology at the end of the twentieth century. Like
    Bouquillon's article, this lecture must find some way
    to narrow so huge a topic.

    The most outstanding characteristic of Catholic
    moral theology in the United States in the twentieth
    century has been the dramatic changes that have
    occurred. The distance between the discussion among
    priest professors at the end of the last century about
    the manuals of moral theology with the aim of
    training confessors for the sacrament of penance and
    debates about feminist ethics in Catholic moral
    theology well illustrate these startling developments.
    James M. Gustafson, the eminent Protestant ethicist
    who has been an insightful and sympathetic critic of
    Catholic moral theology, refers to the "intellectual
    leap or gulf" between these different genres of moral
    theology. Gustafson points out that the story behind
    this change is "so dense and complex that perhaps no
    one can competently tell it at the present time."





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