Janowiak provides an overview of twentieth-century ecclesial sacramentality. He discusses the liturgical movements and important theological issues that led to reform and provides an in-depth analysis of how sacramental theologians Karl Rahner, Otto Semelroth, and Edward Schillebeeckx advanced the dialogue of Christ’s presence in the Word. He explains that despite the seminal work done by those sacramental theologians, a specifically liturgical understanding of Christ’s presence in the Word remains largely a theological concept and not a grace-filled reality. Part of this gap in theory and practice is the result of a fractured liturgical celebration. The Liturgy of the Word appears a distinct and often unrelated part of the entire eucharistic celebration. Using contemporary literary theory, Janowiak tackles this gap and roots out the foundations of this disparity between theology and its practice in worship. He inserts creative liturgical and sacramental theology into the literary particularities of sacred text, shared tradition, and communal hearing. From this a new lens on the sacramentality of the Word emerges.
The dialogue begun by sacramental theologians Rahner, Semelroth, and Schillebeeckx is re-opened by Janowiak. He examines the fruits of the liturgical reform of the past forty years and parallel movements in critical theory. The result is an understanding of Christ’s presence in the Word in a way that reveals the Mystery of God at work in the gathering of believers.
Chapters in Part I are “Worship and the Mystery of God’s Action in the Word” and “The Church as Totus Christus: A Renewal of Sacramentality and Proclamation.” Chapters in Part II are “The Dynamism of the Liturgy of the Word as a Sacramental Event: Insights from New Historicism on the Text and Its Context,” “Reader-Response Criticism and the Liturgical Assembly as Communitas Verbi,” and “The Holy Preaching: A Sacramentality of the Word as ‘Fulfilled in Our Hearing.’”
Paul Janowiak, S.J., is assistant professor of liturgy and sacraments at the graduate School of Theology and Ministry at Seattle University. He is also the university liturgist and coordinator of worship for campus ministry.
"Thoroughly Catholic, utterly ecumenical, and strikingly contemporary: The Holy Preaching beckons us into a rich and challenging journey. It is a well-guided pilgrimage into sacred proclamation that respects the mystery yet proffers understanding; engages the individual reader, while never abandoning its social-ecclesial context; explores the conceptual but always at the service of the pastoral. This is not the last word on the sacramentality of proclamation, but it is unquestionably a good word, and I for one am profoundly grateful for it."
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Edward Foley, Capuchin, Professor of Liturgy and Music, Catholic Theological Union, Chicago