Preface1. The Upward Call2. Re-imaginings3. Raising the Stakes4. A Question of Identity5. Presence in Absence6. The Politics of the Eucharist7. Ascension and AtonementEpilogueA Summary of the Anaphoric Work of ChristPrayers for AscensiontideBibliographyList of ImagesIndex
Building on his much acclaimed study "Ascension and Ecclesia", Douglas Farrow extends the line of thought and presents it to a wider audience.
Douglas Farrow is Professor of Christian Thought, McGill University, Montreal.
How does the risen and ascended Christ exercise his life-giving
lordship? Farrow's answer, developed out of a rich biblical and
patristic background, provides strikingly fresh and accessible
insights into ecclesiology, sacramental theology, Mariology, and
the ongoing Christian engagement with modern culture. The
theological passion is infectious.
*R.R. Reno, Professor of Theology, Creighton University and Senior
Editor, First Things*
The Trinity, the Eucharist, politics, cosmic order, all look
different from the vantage point he takes up in this beautifully
written book...Expressed with a clarity that comes from years of
careful thinking through the issues involved, Ascension Theology is
an absolutely first-rate addition to the body of Catholic
systematics.
*Aidan Nichols, O.P., Blackfriars, Cambridge, UK*
In this bracing and engaging book, Farrow shows why it is important
for Christians to grapple with the Ascension as the natural outcome
of the story of Jesus and the pattern of hope for those who are "in
Christ"... The study nicely bridges the gap between the ancient
faith tradition and political thought today.
*Edith M. Humphrey, Professor of New Testament, Pittsburgh
Theological Seminary, USA*
Those who read Farrow's outstanding text will be sobered - but also
strengthened for the many challenges Christians will face in the
years ahead.
*Most Reverend Charles J. Chaput, O.F.M. Cap., Archbishop of
Denver, USA*
I read Ascension Theology in one sitting, unable to put it down...
Much contemporary theology suffers from too much talk with too
little said. Farrow, on the contrary, has more than a few things to
say and he admirably succeeds in expressing them in the throbbing
discourse characteristic of the early fathers... No serious
theologian or student of theology can afford to ignore this work.
Tolle lege , take and read!
*Reinhard Hütter, Professor of Christian Theology, Duke Divinity
School, USA*
Farrow is a widely read and deep thinker, and the book evidences a
deeply passionate commitment and engages, in an often feisty
manner, the many issues at stake in modernity's gnosticizing
attacks on the gospel.
*First Things*
Farrow's book represents a wonderful example of contemporary
theological reflection based on the'traditional' Patristic
interpretation of the very enigmatical episode of Christ's
exaltation... We can only applaud Prof Douglas Farrow for his
beneficial and inspired book and hope that it reaches the wide
audience intended by its author.
*Reviews of Biblical and Early Christian Studies*
The central thesis of Farrow's work, here and in his earlier book,
is a crucial and timely correction to continuing 'gnostic' trends
in contemporary theology. Much of what he says in commendation of
Roman Catholicism is worthy of careful, if critical, response.
*Regents Review*
Recommended as a Book for Christmas by George Weigel in the
November issues of First Things and Crisis Magazine.
Farrow's text is enhanced through the inclusion fourteen color
illustrations, a fulsome bibliography and index, and a series of
pseudo-appendices that form a short prayer book for the reader's
own contemplation of the Ascension. It deserves a wide readership
among thinking Christians everywhere.
*Catholic Library World*
[I] found Ascension Theology to be one of the best books I have
ever read... This is the type of book that those of us who like to
underline or highlight as we read end up marking nearly every
sentence (and thereby defeating the purpose!)... In all, as I said
above—a phenomenal book.
*www.wheatonblog.wordpress.com*
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