Jak zostać apostołką, czyli feministyczna lektura Biblii w dawnych wiekach Kościoła
Ładowanie...
Data
2011
Autorzy
Tytuł czasopisma
ISSN czasopisma
Tytuł tomu
Wydawca
Papieski Wydział Teologiczny we Wrocławiu
Abstrakt
Sixteen years ago John Paul II appealed for a “new feminism” to come (Evangelium vitae, 99). Surprisingly, we may find some help in the realization of this task in the very old Tradition of the Church: in St. Jerome’s epistles and in those who followed his steps in the Middle Ages. Jerome asked his correspondents to read the Bible in such a way as to underline women’s place in the history of salvation. He encouraged to study the Scriptures engaging the whole knowledge of ancient languages and biblical environment. The Christian Middle Ages continued this Tradition in the best of its representatives: such writers as Rabanus Maurus, Bernard of Clairvaux and Peter Damiani were directing thoughts of their hearers to the same way of reading the Bible. With the present analysis we try to introduce the appeal of the pope Benedict XVI from his latest exhortation Verbum Domini: “The most profound interpretation of Scripture comes precisely from those who let themselves be shaped by the word of God” (48).
Opis
Słowa kluczowe
apostolstwo, apostolat, Kościół, nauczanie Kościoła, dokumenty Kościoła, kobieta, Biblia, Pismo Święte, lektura Biblii, Hieronim ze Strydonu, ojcowie Kościoła, cnoty niewieście, cnoty, apostołki, apostolate, Church, Church teaching, Church documents, woman, Bible, reading the Bible, Jerome of Stridon, Church Fathers, womanly virtues, virtues, female apostles
Cytowanie
Wrocławski Przegląd Teologiczny, 2011, R. 19, Nr 2, s. 69-79.
Licencja
CC-BY-SA - Uznanie autorstwa - Na tych samych warunkach