Product Description
Translated by Graham Harrison.
Hardcover, 1994, brown foxing and age spotting to the edges of the dustjacket, some age spotting to page block ends . Originally published in German in 1980.
Ignatius Press, USA.
Building on the previous volumes, he offers his account of Christ’s Paschal Mystery, which is the decisive turning point in the drama between God and the world. This is a theology of redemption in a dramatic key: As his decision to begin with an exegesis of the Book of Revelation underscores, Balthasar resolutely eschews fashionable attempts to fit the Cross into any evolutionary narrative of progress toward “enlightenment.” Yet his realistic contemplation of the clash between divine and human freedom does not focus exclusively on conflict, but issues in a truly Catholic vision of reconciliation between Creator and creature. It is precisely the Cross of the God-man, Balthasar says, that heals the ruptures threatening to obscure the non-competitive analogy between divine and human freedom highlighted in volume II.1. What shines forth in the apparent defeat of the Cross is the victorious, world-encompassing primacy of the good.
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