Scripture and the Mystery of the MassScott Hahn, Regis J. Flaherty Emmaus Road Publishing, 2004 - 203 pagini Scripture & the Mystery of the Mass will help Catholics and non-Catholics alike develop a better understanding of the Mass. Edited by Scott Hahn and Regis Flaherty, with a foreword by Bishop Robert C. Morlino, Scripture & the Mystery of the Mass brings you such prominent Catholic authors as Scott and Kimberly Hahn, Jeff Cavins, Tim Gray, Edward Sri, Curtis Mitch, Leon J. Suprenant, and others. Each chapter explores the biblical foundation of the Mass in light of Church teaching, going to heart of topics like “The Mass and Evangelization," “The Eucharist in the Apostolic Church,” and “The Mass and the Apocalypse.”
This book is one of four books in the Catholic for a Reason Series.
Authors: Edward Sri, Curtis Mitch, Scott Hahn, Thomas Nash, Tim Gray, Sean Innerst, Stephen Pimentel, Michael Barber, Leon J. Suprenant, Curtis Martin, Jeff Cavins, and Kimberly Hahn. Foreword by Bishop Robert C. Morlino.
About the Catholic for a Reason Series: This benchmark series brings together the expert knowledge and personal insight of today’s top Catholic apologists on topics at the heart of the Catholic faith. Whether you’re a non-Catholic who wants to learn about the Church’s teaching, or a Catholic who wants to become a more articulate defender of the faith, the Catholic for a Reason series is for you. |
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... next day he saw Jesus coming toward him, and said, 'Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!'” (Jn. 1:29). Once again, following the example of John the Baptist, this is an CatholiC for a r eason iii 16.
... coming” are often treated as equivalent terms, showing the close link between the two meanings of the “coming” of Christ. The Eucharist is the awaited parousia, the coming of Christ, exactly as Jesus Himself promised it would be ...
... coming of Christ was 'already' and 'not yet': he had come already—in the incarnation, and on the basis of the incarnation would come in the Eucharist; he had come already in the Eucharist, and would come at the last in the new cup that ...
... coming of Christ, the parousia; and what they meant by parousia is what we today should mean by the Real Presence. But our ancestors seem to have held that belief more firmly, and understood it more fully, than most Catholics do today ...
... Coming? The Greek word parousia means “coming, arrival, or advent.” In Christian parlance, it has come to mean, specifically, Christ's return in glory at the end of time. Jesus Himself used the term many times in describing this ...
Cuprins
He Died Once but His Sacrifice Lives | 49 |
From Jewish Passover to Christian Eucharist | 65 |
Time for Liturgy | 77 |
The Eucharist in the Apostolic Church | 97 |
The Mass and the Apocalypse | 109 |
The Difference Jesus Makes | 123 |
The Mass and Evangelization | 139 |
A Marriage Made in Heaven | 173 |
Bibliography | 199 |
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
Scripture and the Mystery of the Mass Scott Hahn,Regis J. Flaherty,Leon J. Suprenant Previzualizare limitată - 2004 |