Ebook
Herbert McCabe OP was one of the most intelligent Roman Catholic thinkers of the 20th century, whose writings have enjoyed enormous and welcome success. A significant influence on philosophers such as Anthony Kenny and Alasdair McIntyre, McCabe also counted amongst his friends Seamus Heaney and Terry Eagleton, and moved amongst the literary elite. His wide personal interests are reflected in his writings, which cover a broad range of topics. In this reader we glimpse an insight into the workings of a brilliant mind occupied by topics including the philosophy of God and Christian doctrine, ethics and moral theology, the problem of evil, the philosophical theology of St Thomas Aquinas, the traditional catholic concern for prayer, liturgy, Mary and St Dominic. Further musings reflect on issues that interested McCabe the most - philosophy of God, Christology, fundamental and sacramental theology, and ethics.
Edited by Brian Davies and Paul Kucharski, two well known McCabe specialists, the selection is a gem which will be of use to any reader interested in comprehending the key issues for a thoughtful life, and also includes some of McCabe's most dazzling sermons.
A comprehensive anthology of the most original and creative work of the late Dominican theologian Herbert McCabe OP.
Herbert McCabe has been highly influential in modern theology but to date there is no comparable selection of his works collated in one place: this volume fills a real gap
The volume spans publications from McCabe's career, bringing to prominence the development of his personal theological approach over time
The essays featured are increasingly hard to access, as original volumes have gone out of print and they are here made easily available
Preface
Introduction
Part I: Philosophy of God and Christian Doctrine
God and Creation
The Logic of Mysticism
The Involvement of God
Evil
Are Creeds Credible?
Doubt is not Unbelief
He was Crucified, Suffered Death, and was Buried
Nobody Comes to the Father but by Me
Prayer
Part II: Ethics and Moral Theology
The Good Life
Politics and Virtue
Ethics as Language
Teaching Morals
Essays on Aquinas
A Very Short Introduction to Aquinas
Aquinas on God is Good
Aquinas on the Trinity
Aquinas on the Incarnation
Aquinas on Good Sense
Sermons
Faith
The Genealogy of Christ
Jesus and Sanctity
A Sermon for Easter
Motorways and God
Render to Caesar
Life After Death
McCabe Bibliography
As the years go by since his death in 2001, Herbert McCabe emerges as one of the twentieth century's finest Catholic thinkers: grounded in decades of reflection on the writings of Thomas Aquinas, his most characteristic themes are skilfully gathered in this excellent anthology.
Any new collection of essays by Herbert McCabe raises instant expectations of vivacious prose, razor-sharp wit, lucidity of style, high humour, and a host of arresting insights. Can anyone match him for turning a series of profound reflections on God, sin, Creation, evil, redemption and ethics into such delightful entertainment?
During his time at Blackfriars Herbert McCabe was an irreplaceable figure on the Oxford scene. No one else combined a Friar Tuck lifestyle and an explosive wit with an intellect that was a match for any don's. This well-chosen selection of texts will serve to introduce McCabe's thought to new readers while giving pleasure to long-standing afficionados. Few philosophers and theologians have been able to combine such density of thought with such clarity of expression.
Herbert McCabe was perhaps the most distinctive and challenging theologian in the anglophone Catholic traditions of the late twentieth century. Alive with energy and wit, his thought closely argued but delightfully lucid, his writings at once challenge lazy thinking and inspire theological creativity. This is a stunning collection.
Now readers of this generation will be able to imbibe Thomas from Herbert, as we all did: from the master among us to our master Thomas, to the Master whose word suffuses the prose. We discover how exciting and surprising that is, as we relish a wit and prose we wish we could deliver ourselves-without envy, in sheer delight. Astute editors waste no time plunging us into the metaphysics of divine action, where we quickly learn how speaking of God outstrips ordinary prose.
There are many more good things in The McCabe Reader which I must pass over, so I conclude that the set of sermons here published indicates that McCabe must have been a very exciting preacher, able to recall in a few simple words some of the truths about love, freedom, and mere humanity on which he has elaborated in [this book].
Brian Davies is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at Fordham University, USA.
Paul Kucharski is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Manhattanville College in New York, USA