The author suggests that evangelicalism's appraisal of Roman Catholicism has lacked systematic awareness, tending instead towards more episodic aphoristic criticism of Roman doctrine, which for all its truth lacks integrated analysis. With this in mind, Dr. de Chirico proposes a critique which (i) applies the category of 'system' or 'worldview' to Roman Catholicism, and (ii) perceives two foundational theological foci in Roman theology - the relationship between nature and grace, and the self-understanding of the Church.
“Nature and Grace” is a huge topic all its own. I’ve written on the topic of “the self-understanding of the Roman Catholic Church” in the past, and my hope in this upcoming series is to respond more systematically to the issue of “the self-understanding of the [Roman Catholic] Church”.
Meanwhile, here are some links that can serve as a place to review some of the issues for anyone who’s hoping to look more closely at this topic:
The Roman Church Thinks Highly of Itself
The Pillar and Ground of the Truth
The Real Body of Christ
The Church that Roman Catholics Believe In Today
Rome is all about aggrandizing Rome
Newman, “The Roman Catholic Hermeneutic”, and Rome’s Foundational Assumption
Whatever else the “definition of the word church” contains, it must be purged of Roman conceptions of Rome
I’ll be placing these blog posts into the category “Roman Catholic Ecclesiology”. If you click on that link at the bottom of any of these blog posts, it will bring up all the Triablogue posts on that topic.
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