Antonio Aranda e-mail(Login required)

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Antonio Aranda e-mail(Login required)

Abstract

142
In the theological conception that is revealed in the fourteen encyclicals of John Paul II, as in the rest of his doctrinal documents, anthropology and Christology are inseparable. Only the son of God, making Himself man and uniting Himself with all humankind, has totally revealed the mystery of man. If the central theme of the philosophy and theology of Karol Wojtyla (in which the imago Dei is palpable) was man, as this paper asserts, man will also be the centre of the doctrinal message and pastoral action of John Paul II. His anthropocentrism is, at the same time, Christocentrism and for this reason is also, in its roots, Theocentrism. The interpretative key to his writings previous to his Pontificate is the notion of man as a person, the image of the subsistent Being, who is not in any way absolutely alone, but who is absolute and mysterious communion. This same truth of man as a personal image of the Trinitarian God always performs the function of the ultimate doctrinal foundation in his encyclicals. The theological framework of these texts is modelled by these statements and, even more, by the implicit theology of two conciliar passages that are repeatedly quoted in them: Gaudium et spes, n 22 and Gaudium et spes, n 24.

Keywords

John Paul II, Anthropocentrism-Christocentrism, Encyclicals

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Section
Research Studies
Author Biography

Antonio Aranda, Universidad de Navarra.

Pamplona