Papal primacy :
Schatz, Klaus.
Papal primacy : from its origins to the present / Klaus Schatz ; translated from German by John A. Otto and Linda M. Maloney. - Collegeville, Minn .: Liturgical Press, c1996. - x, 197 p. ; 23 cm.
"A Michael Glazier book."
Includes bibliographical references and index.
The Development of the Primacy in the First Five Centuries. Stating the Problem: Preliminary Questions and Answers. The Religious and Spiritual Significance of the Roman Church. Rome as Privileged Locus of Tradition. Rome as Center of Communio. From Center of Communio to Leadership of the Whole Church -- Differences in the Unifying Function of Papal Primacy in East and West. Primacy and Imperial Church Structures, 400-900. Primacy in the Emerging West -- The Papacy as Head if the Medieval Church and Christianity. The Historical Background. Stages of the Concept of Papal Primacy. Primacy in Relation to Councils and Bishops. The Crisis of Primacy in the Late Middle Ages -- Primacy as a Mark of Confessional Identity in the Modern Era. From the Reformation to the Enlightenment. From the French Revolution to Vatican I. The First Vatican Council. After 1870: Is There a Future? Pt. 1. I. II. III. IV. V. Pt. 2. I. II. Pt. 3. I. II. III. IV. Pt. 4. I. II. III. IV. App. Text 1. Irenaeus of Lyons, Adversus haereses 3.3.1-2 -- App. Text 2. The Canons of Sardica 3, 4, 5 (343) -- App. Text 3. Gregory VII, Dictatus papae (1075) -- App. Text 4. The Council of Constance, Decree Haec sancta (April 6, 1415) -- App. Text 5. The Council of Florence, Formula of Primacy -- App. Text 6. The Four Gallican Articles, Declaration of the Clergy of France (March 19, 1682) -- App. Text 7. Papal Primacy of Jurisdiction and Papal Infallibility According to Vatican I (1870) -- App. Text 8. Episcopal Collegiality and Papal Infallibility According to Vatican II (Lumen gentium 22).
Has the papal office always been what it now is, and will it always be the same as it is today? In this, the first complete history of papal primacy, Klaus Schatz traces the development of the idea of a papacy as center of teaching and jurisdiction from its earliest Roman beginnings, through centuries of development, the great papal schism and the struggles over conciliarism and Gallicanism, to the triumph of papal authority at Vatican I and beyond that to Vatican II. Papal primacy has grown with the Church, and it remains a reality embedded in the Church as a living community begins to change.
081465522X
96008001
Popes--Primacy.
BX1805 / .S3413 1996
Papal primacy : from its origins to the present / Klaus Schatz ; translated from German by John A. Otto and Linda M. Maloney. - Collegeville, Minn .: Liturgical Press, c1996. - x, 197 p. ; 23 cm.
"A Michael Glazier book."
Includes bibliographical references and index.
The Development of the Primacy in the First Five Centuries. Stating the Problem: Preliminary Questions and Answers. The Religious and Spiritual Significance of the Roman Church. Rome as Privileged Locus of Tradition. Rome as Center of Communio. From Center of Communio to Leadership of the Whole Church -- Differences in the Unifying Function of Papal Primacy in East and West. Primacy and Imperial Church Structures, 400-900. Primacy in the Emerging West -- The Papacy as Head if the Medieval Church and Christianity. The Historical Background. Stages of the Concept of Papal Primacy. Primacy in Relation to Councils and Bishops. The Crisis of Primacy in the Late Middle Ages -- Primacy as a Mark of Confessional Identity in the Modern Era. From the Reformation to the Enlightenment. From the French Revolution to Vatican I. The First Vatican Council. After 1870: Is There a Future? Pt. 1. I. II. III. IV. V. Pt. 2. I. II. Pt. 3. I. II. III. IV. Pt. 4. I. II. III. IV. App. Text 1. Irenaeus of Lyons, Adversus haereses 3.3.1-2 -- App. Text 2. The Canons of Sardica 3, 4, 5 (343) -- App. Text 3. Gregory VII, Dictatus papae (1075) -- App. Text 4. The Council of Constance, Decree Haec sancta (April 6, 1415) -- App. Text 5. The Council of Florence, Formula of Primacy -- App. Text 6. The Four Gallican Articles, Declaration of the Clergy of France (March 19, 1682) -- App. Text 7. Papal Primacy of Jurisdiction and Papal Infallibility According to Vatican I (1870) -- App. Text 8. Episcopal Collegiality and Papal Infallibility According to Vatican II (Lumen gentium 22).
Has the papal office always been what it now is, and will it always be the same as it is today? In this, the first complete history of papal primacy, Klaus Schatz traces the development of the idea of a papacy as center of teaching and jurisdiction from its earliest Roman beginnings, through centuries of development, the great papal schism and the struggles over conciliarism and Gallicanism, to the triumph of papal authority at Vatican I and beyond that to Vatican II. Papal primacy has grown with the Church, and it remains a reality embedded in the Church as a living community begins to change.
081465522X
96008001
Popes--Primacy.
BX1805 / .S3413 1996