Il vantaggio di ogni crisi, come quella che sta attraversando attualmente la società, è che «costringe a tornare alle domande; esige da noi risposte nuove o vecchie, purché scaturite da un esame diretto» (Hannah Arendt). È un invito ad aprirsi agli altri e a non irrigidirsi sulle proprie posizioni. È un’occasione di incontro e una circostanza preziosa anche per i cristiani, chiamati a verificare la capacità della fede di reggere davanti alle nuove sfide, chiamati a entrare senza timore in un dialogo a tutto campo nello spazio pubblico. La bellezza disarmata propone gli elementi essenziali della riflessione svolta da don Julián Carrón a partire dal 2005, anno della sua elezione a presidente della Fraternità di Comunione e Liberazione dopo la scomparsa del fondatore, il Servo di Dio don Luigi Giussani, che nel 2004 lo aveva chiamato dalla Spagna per condividere con lui la responsabilità di guida del movimento. Gli scritti, nati in occasioni diverse, sono stati ampiamente rielaborati e ordinati dall’Autore allo scopo di fornire organicamente i fattori di un percorso decennale, lungo il quale egli ha approfondito il contenuto della proposta cristiana nel solco di don Giussani, alla luce del magistero pontificio e in paragone col travaglio e le urgenze dell’uomo contemporaneo. Il volume intende offrire il contributo di una esperienza di vita a chiunque sia alla ricerca di ragioni adeguate per vivere e costruire spazi di libertà e di convivenza in una società pluralistica.
Julián Carrón (born 25 February 1950) is a Spanish Catholic priest, and theologian and the former leader of the Italian Communion and Liberation movement.
A beautiful series of essays on how to revive faith in the 21st century. Carron says the source of the 21st century human malaise is the loss of the human, of the "I". He focuses his call to action on the need of Catholics to demonstrate the transforming nature of faith, saying it's only in the human and her expression of radical change and joy that a religion can demonstrate its newness, or its relevance to the ills, sorrows, and struggles of each generation, thus attracting new people to the faith.
I disagreed with a LOT of the claims in this book, but that should come as no surprise. (What am I doing reading a book about reviving Catholic faith?!, you might rightly ask. I bought the book a year or so ago when I saw another person reading it and when my beliefs were more aligned with the views in the book.) Quickly, my three disagreements: Carron is not clear about what constitutes "true" experience, he fails to address seriously the heinous pedophilia problem in the leadership of the Catholic church when saying the church is the solution for suffering (what about when the church is the *source* of suffering?), and his views on marriage, virginity, homosexuality, and the necessity of religious belief for a good and deeply fulfilled life are quite opposed to my way of thinking. Those aside, the writing is beautiful, the ideas coherent within the Catholic framework, the logic mostly sound (with his Catholic assumptions acknowledged), and the way he talks about being human is lovely and quite touching at times.
"Faith is 'verficiation' when it shows its ability to illuminate and bring to fullness the typically human dynamics of reason, affection, and freedom, and so increases the existential certainty essential to an adult in all of life's circumstances."
According to Carron, Christianity should be attractive and appealing to humanity because Christian's should live rich, full, beautiful lives of affection, reason, and freedom.
I don't remember how this book entered my to-read list, probably something in The Christian Century a few years ago. The author is a Spanish Catholic theologian supporting the witness of Pope Francis while also embracing the theology of Pope Benedict. There were a number of areas where I disagreed about the particulars of an ethical and faithful life (marriage for instance) but the broad ideas were engaging and resonated with some of my other theological reading such as Wendell Berry and Stanley Hauerwas. I think I'll make use of some of the ideas and sentences, and always good to keep a little theological diversity in one's reading.
This is a collection of essays by a Spanish Catholic priest and ecclesiastical leader. He is trying to address how Catholics can thrive in a secular world. I would probably agree with most of what is in the book, but I found the writing style too philosophical and hard to follow or understand what was meant in many cases.
An introduction to the thought of Fr. Giussani & the ecclesial movement he founded: Communion & Liberation. Much of what is addressed is what ails our world and how the event of the Incarnation, our encounter with Jesus Christ and his acting in our lives as part of a community can bring about change.
GENIUS!! took me so so long to read but worth every moment to treasure and meditate on. Fr. Carron delves into what it means to be human in this liberating and insightful book. Well structured, it builds slowly on human reason and then tackles questions from everyday joys to lifetime struggles. This book points to our great & glorious God
Beautiful Book for our age and ultimately a treatise for being human- the only struggles of the book arise from Carrons syntax, which I assume arise from translation issues.