Roczniki Teologiczne, 2020, T. 67, nr 2
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Pozycja Il Personalismo di Joseph Ratzinger/Benedetto XVIPanaro, Antonio (Wydawnictwo Towarzystwa Naukowego Katolickiego Uniwersytetu Lubelskiego, 2020)Joseph Ratzinger, in his autobiography entitled My Life, writes about his encounter with personalism, later found explained by Martin Buber, as: “A spiritual experience that left an essential mark, even if I spontaneously associated such personalism with the thought of St. Augustin, who in his Confessions had struck me with the power of all his human passion and depth.” From that moment on, all his theology emanates with personalism. He is convinced that “Christian faith does not relate to an idea but to a Person” (Intruduction to Christianity). The personalistic thinking of Joseph Ratzinger becomes evident when he describes the essence of the Sacrament of Baptism as well as the contents of the profession of faith in One and – at the same time – Three-personed God. “Being Christian is not the result of an ethical choice or a lofty idea, but the encounter with an event, a person” (Deus Caritas est, 1). Joseph Ratzinger-Benedict XVI underlines the significance of person in all his theology by focusing on the concept of person in Trinitology and Christology, in which he develops a personalism in the purest form.Pozycja The Worship of Divine Mercy in Light of the Teaching of Pope Benedict XVI and Pope FrancisLancton, Thaddaeus (Wydawnictwo Towarzystwa Naukowego Katolickiego Uniwersytetu Lubelskiego, 2020)The two most recent Popes – Benedict XVI and Francis – have continued John Paul II’s emphasis on Divine Mercy. Each provides a particular emphasis, which results in a different manner of worshipping Divine Mercy. While each emphasize the entirety of salvation history as revealing Divine Mercy, with its climax in Jesus Christ, Pope Francis more often speaks of mercy so as to avoid a theory of mercy that is not put into practice. One such manner of implementing mercy is the addition of new mysteries of mercy to the Rosary. While this has no support from the papal magisterium of Pope Benedict, it does find support in Pope Francis’ desire to find ways for mercy to penetrate ever more into the daily attitudes and actions of Christians. Even so, care must be taken to frame such a change in the veneration of Divine Mercy within a proper theology that highlights the presence of Divine Mercy in the pre-existing mysteries, particularly that the Incarnation and the Paschal Mystery.