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Introductory notes for readers of this thesis - Theses - Flinders ...

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fulfilment in following the absolute self-giving <strong>of</strong> Jesus which triumphs over the commontemporal boundary <strong>of</strong> death and reaches towards the infinite horizon <strong>of</strong> eternal life 35 .Central to Rahner’s theology <strong>of</strong> the significance <strong>of</strong> embodied Word is the historicaldrama <strong>of</strong> the resurrection. The prophetic word—the discernment and public identification<strong>of</strong> specific, one-<strong>of</strong>f acts in history—is salvific in nature because these events address andresolve a particular question in relation to the major human existential angst: death as thebarrier to full meaning and actualisation. Ackley <strong>notes</strong> that Rahner views the resurrectionas the particular historical event thatsignals the definitive Word <strong>of</strong> God, the divine self-promise in both word and deedthat answers the radical question posed by death. The life and death <strong>of</strong> Jesus havesymbolic-sacramental significance <strong>for</strong> us in light <strong>of</strong> the resurrection as the sign <strong>of</strong>God’s salvific will that causes what it signifies 36 .Jesus is the ultimate, climactic Word <strong>of</strong> God: his resurrection speaks unequivocally tohumans as the validation <strong>of</strong> both the eternal nature <strong>of</strong> human being and God’s promisedwelcoming <strong>of</strong> humans into eternal life.Jesus is ‘both the definitive expression <strong>of</strong> God and the supreme fulfilment <strong>of</strong> humanity’ 37 .Human beings share in the ‘new miraculous humanity’ that Jesus inaugurates because theworld, created by God, has become God’s existential reality through Jesus’ interventionin human history. From the resurrection perspective, ‘God created the world andeverything in it with the possibility <strong>of</strong> being assumed by God to become the material <strong>for</strong>an Incarnation <strong>of</strong> the Word’ 38 . God has spoken the Word <strong>of</strong> his whole person through themedium <strong>of</strong> Jesus’ full participation in the human transcendental experience: Jesus hasbecome the absolute answer to human transcendental hopes, through the faithabandonment<strong>of</strong> crucifixion, and the death-triumph <strong>of</strong> resurrection 39 .35 J. Ackley, The church <strong>of</strong> the word, 42-48.36 Ibid, 46.37 Ibid.38 Ibid, 48.39 For a fuller discussion <strong>of</strong> Rahner’s theological understanding <strong>of</strong> the salvific meaning <strong>of</strong> the death andresurrection <strong>of</strong> Christ see, J. O’Donnell, Karl Rahner – Life in the Spirit (Rome, Gregorian UniversityPress, 2004), 47-57 and in Rahner’s own words: ‘Interpreting and experiencing the words and deeds <strong>of</strong>Jesus today’ in Karl Rahner in dialogue, 231; K. Rahner, Prayers <strong>for</strong> a lifetime, Raffelt, A. ed. (Edinbugh:T & T Clark, 1984), 81.136

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