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In At the Origin of the Christian Claim Luigi Giussani examines Christ's claim to identify himself with the mystery that is the ultimate answer to our search for the meaning of existence.
If we accept the hypothesis that the mystery entered the realm of human existence and spoke in human terms, Giussani argues, the relationship between the individual and God is no longer based on a moral, imaginative, or aesthetic human effort but instead on coming upon an event in one's life. Thus the religious method is overturned by Christ: in Christianity it is no longer the person who seeks to know the mystery but the mystery that makes himself known by entering history.
At the Origin of the Christian Claim, newly revised by John Zucchi, presents an intriguing argument supported with ample documentation from the gospels and other theological writings. Monsignor Luigi Giussani (1922-2005) was the founder of the Catholic lay movement Communion and Liberation in Italy. His works are available in over twenty languages. The new revised edition of At the Origin of the Christian Claim presents an intriguing argument that the relationship between a person and God is based not on the person's search for the mystery but on the mystery making itself known. A fresh look at Giussani's foundational work on Christ's Incarnation.
If we accept the hypothesis that the mystery entered the realm of human existence and spoke in human terms, Giussani argues, the relationship between the individual and God is no longer based on a moral, imaginative, or aesthetic human effort but instead on coming upon an event in one's life. Thus the religious method is overturned by Christ: in Christianity it is no longer the person who seeks to know the mystery but the mystery that makes himself known by entering history.
At the Origin of the Christian Claim, newly revised by John Zucchi, presents an intriguing argument supported with ample documentation from the gospels and other theological writings. Monsignor Luigi Giussani (1922-2005) was the founder of the Catholic lay movement Communion and Liberation in Italy. His works are available in over twenty languages. The new revised edition of At the Origin of the Christian Claim presents an intriguing argument that the relationship between a person and God is based not on the person's search for the mystery but on the mystery making itself known. A fresh look at Giussani's foundational work on Christ's Incarnation.