Meeting Saint Paul with the Pope: Wednesday Audiences During the Pauline Jubilee Year

Front Cover
Paulist Press, 2009 - Religion - 133 pages
During the special Pauline Jubilee Year, Pope Benedict XVI used his Wednesday audiences as an opportunity to meet one of the most influential persons in the history of Christianity, Saint Paul. Meeting Saint Paul is the complete collection of these twenty-one papal reflections.
 

Contents

Religious and Cultural Environment
1
Life of Saint Paul Before and After Damascus
7
Saint Pauls Conversion
15
Saint Pauls Concept of Apostle
21
Paul the Twelve and the prePauline Church
27
The Council of Jerusalem and the Incident in Antioch
33
The Relationship with the Historical Jesus
39
Saint Pauls Teaching on the Church
45
The Decisiveness of the Resurrection
63
The Expectation of the Parousia
70
From Works to Faith
77
The Apostles Teaching on Faith and Works
83
The Apostles Teaching on the Relationship between Adam and Christ
88
Theology of the Sacraments
95
Letters to the Colossians and Ephesians
111
Saint Pauls Life and Legacy
126

Preexistence and Incarnation
51
The Theology of the Cross
57

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About the author (2009)

Joseph Ratzinger was born on April 16, 1927 in Marktl am Inn in the state of Bavaria, Germany. Ratzinger entered the minor seminary in Traunstein, in 1939 and in 1943 along with the rest of his seminary class he was drafted into the Flak [anti-aircraft corps]. In 1944 he was released from the Flak and returned home only to be drafted into labor detail under the infamous Austrian Legion. In the spring of 1945 Ratzinger deserted the army and headed home but when the Americans arrive at his village shortly thereafter, he was identified as a German soldier and incarcerated in a POW camp for a brief time. Following his release he re-entered the seminary. In 1951 Joseph was ordained into the priesthood and began lectures as a full professor of fundamental theology at the University of Bonn. From 1962-65 Ratzinger was present during all four sessions of the Second Vatican Council as a peritus, or chief theological advisor to Cardinal Joseph Frings of Cologne, Germany.. In 1977 Joseph Ratzinger was appointed Archbishop of Munich and Freising and on June 27 elevated to Cardinal of Munich by Pope Paul VI. In 1981 Ratzinger accepted Pope John Paul II's invitation to take over as Prefect for the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and in 1986 he was appointed head of a 12-member commission responsible for drafting the Catechism of the Catholic Church. Cardinal Ratzinger was elected vice dean of the College of Cardinals in 1988. In 2002 Pope John Paul II, approved his election as dean of the College of Cardinals. On April 8, 2005, Cardinal Ratzinger presided over the funeral of Pope John Paul II. On April 19, 2005, Cardinal Ratzinger was elected Bishop of Rome on the fourth ballot of the conclave and took the name Benedict XVI.

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