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Book Description: The provocative title of
these essays plays on a traditional Catholic slogan: "No salvation
outside the church." But as Fr. Sobrino notes, salvation has many
dimensions, both personal and social, historical and transcendent.
Insofar as it implies God's response to a world marked by suffering and
injustice, then the poor represent an indispensable test, a key to the
healing of a sick society. Drawing on the radical hope of Christian
faith -- the promise of the Kingdom of God and the resurrection of the
death -- Sobrino presents a bold counter-cultural challenge to a
"civilization of wealth" that lives off the blood of the poor. Inspired
by the witness of Oscar Romero and Ignacio Ellacurķa, and the church's
preferential option for the poor, Sobrino offers these
"prophetic-utopian" reflections on faith and the meaning of
discipleship in our time.
Jon Sobrino, a Spanish-born Jesuit theologian, has spent the
past 50 years in El Salvador. He is the author of many works, including
the award-winning 2-volume Christology, Jesus the Liberator and Christ the Liberator, as well as Where is God? Earthquake, Terrorism, Barbarity, and Hope, and Witnesses to the Kingdom: The Martyrs of El Salvador and the Crucified Peoples.
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