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Henry Novello [7]Henry L. Novello [1]
  1. Evangelising culture in a technological age: Faith as lived culture.Henry Novello - 2014 - The Australasian Catholic Record 91 (2):214.
    Novello, Henry The concept of culture has assumed much importance in the Catholic Church since the Second Vatican Council and it has also become a topic of crucial importance for the World Council of Churches. For the first time in church history, an ecumenical council debated at length on the issue of culture, and the result was that culture is now recognised as not only integral to the flourishing of the human person but also to the revelation of God and (...)
     
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  2. Created reality as the manifestation of spirit.Henry Novello - 2013 - The Australasian Catholic Record 90 (1):60.
    Novello, Henry In the past it was customary to conceive of human nature according to a dualistic anthropology where 'body' and 'spirit' were treated as two separate substances, with spirit viewed as a divine immaterial substance inhabiting the physical body and giving the human person the functional capacity to relate to God. With the development of the various natural sciences, however, a variety of perspectives on human nature have emerged, most of which are monistic, not dualistic, in character. In contemporary (...)
     
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  3. Death as privilege.Henry L. Novello - 2003 - Gregorianum 84 (4):779-827.
     
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  4. Eschatology since Vatican iI: Saved in hope.Henry Novello - 2013 - The Australasian Catholic Record 90 (4):410.
    Novello, Henry The word 'eschatology' means doctrine about the eschata or 'last things.' In the neo-Scholastic manual style of theology that dominated Catholic theology before the twentieth century, eschatology was the doctrine of those things that awaited the individual person beyond death, as well as those things that awaited the whole of humanity at the end of time. The teaching on the last things appeared as an appendix at the end of dogmatic theology where it led a rather barren existence (...)
     
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  5. Looking unto the Hidden Zion: A Christian Appreciation of the Holy Land.Henry Novello - 2010 - The Australasian Catholic Record 87 (1):77.
     
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  6. Redemption as integral to the gratuity of creation: An eschatological reading of genesis 1-3.Henry Novello - 2011 - The Australasian Catholic Record 88 (4):462.
  7. The church's lament: Child sexual abuse and the new evangelisation.Henry Novello - 2015 - The Australasian Catholic Record 92 (3):298.
    Novello, Henry We all know that these are difficult times for the Catholic Church in Australia as it grapples with the scandalous and painful issue of child sexual abuse by some clergy, religious, and lay church personnel. The Commonwealth Royal Commission investigating institutional responses to child sexual abuse, announced by Prime Minister Julia Gillard on 12 November 2012, has made life for the faithful even more difficult, as the Catholic Church in Australia comes under intense and continual public scrutiny. The (...)
     
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  8. The Robust Joy of the Christian life.Henry Novello - 2014 - The Australasian Catholic Record 91 (3):323.
    Novello, Henry The New Testament is undoubtedly a book of joy. The verb chairein, which means to rejoice, occurs seventy-two times in the New Testament and the noun chara, which means joy, occurs sixty times. The word chairein is found both at the beginning of the gospel story and at the end: at the annunciation the angel greets Mary by saying, 'Joy be with you', and on the resurrection morning the risen Jesus greets the women who had come to mourn (...)
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