Although he never formally articulated a theology of political life or a fundamental moral theology, Joseph Ratzinger's attentiveness to the Church and its relation to the modern world occasioned a wealth of reflection on Christian ethics and the primacy of God in the social order. In Joseph Ratzinger on Politics and Morals, D. Vincent Twomey, S.V.D., elucidates the German theologian's insights in these areas, drawing out their unity and rootedness in a deeper vision of man's God-given capacity for truth and communion. Twomey takes as his starting point Ratzinger's linking of Christian morality and discipleship—that Christian living is the result of an encounter with Christ that transforms and fulfills the rational creature's relationship to God. For Ratzinger, this moral dimension of Christianity does not distance the Church from the world, but instead gives it a missional impetus to incorporate and reorient mankind's great ethical intuitions, which reflect the natural law and man's creation for union with God. Against this background Twomey unpacks Ratzinger's considerations of conscience and the impacts of sin on the person and society, all of which testifies to man’s need for the healing grace of Christ. He in turn shows how Ratzinger's own theology of political life trades on a proper distinction between the spheres of faith and of politics, an affirmation of justice as the goal of politics, and acknowledgment of God's primacy in both the personal and the political realms.
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Vincent Twomey, S.V.D., earned his Ph.D. in theology at the University of Regensburg under the supervision of Joseph Ratzinger. He is Professor Emeritus of Moral Theology at St. Patrick’s Pontifical University, Maynooth, where in 1986 he co-founded the Patristic Symposium to promote patristic studies in Ireland. Fr. Twomey previously held teaching positions at the Regional Seminary in Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands, and at the Divine Word Missionaries Faculty of Theology at St. Gabriel’s in Mödling, Austria. He also served as Visiting Professor at the University of Fribourg and Visiting Scholar at Seton Hall University. He is the former editor of the Irish Theological Quarterly and the co-editor of several volumes of the proceedings of the International Patristic Conference, Maynooth.
