1 / 13

Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Faith Makes Us Live: Haitian Catholics and the Eucharistic Imagination Talk given at DePaul University, April 13, 2011. Easter Triduum and Eucharistic Resources.

yuki
Télécharger la présentation

Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Faith Makes Us Live: Haitian Catholics and the Eucharistic Imagination Talk given at DePaul University, April 13, 2011

  2. Easter Triduum and Eucharistic Resources

  3. “Fight, life is not easy; don’t be afraid, Jesus is there.” Embracing Suffering

  4. “Alleluia. I will never forget what Jesus did for me. Alleluia.” Word and Light

  5. “It’s not our color, nor our culture, we have to change. It’s our heart.” Transformation and Thanksgiving

  6. “Jesus came with us on the boat” Sacramental Permeability

  7. “We should give without expecting to receive in return.” Transformation and Thanksgiving Theology of Grace and Hope

  8. Easter Triduum and Eucharistic Resources

  9. Eucharistic Imagination and Social Transformation Deus Caritas Est (Pope Benedict XVI, 2005) Three-fold responsibility of the Church: Proclaiming the word of God, Celebrating the sacraments, Charity Caritas in Veritate (Pope Benedict XVI, 2009) Two paths of charity: individual action and associative work

  10. Haitians’ Associative Institutions in the U.S., France and Quebec

  11. A Sociological, Theological, and Eucharistic Imagination • What can theology learn from sociology? • Need to pay attention to histories of religion-state relations to understand how the church carries out its moral and social teachings • Need to speak out for religious freedom, not just freedom of conscience but freedom to create associations and advocate for the public good

  12. A Sociological, Theological, and Eucharistic Imagination • What can sociology learn from theology? • Need to put “deep relationality” at the heart of human motivation. Human persons desire other human connections as least as fundamentally as they desire material things. • Eucharistic communities are communities of gratitude; community life is an end in and of itself, not only a means to material or individualistic ends.

  13. Book Website: www.faithmakesuslive.com Blog: www.margaritamooney. blogspot.com My Homepage: www.margaritamooney.com

More Related