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

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homage <strong>for</strong> Your beloved free Will, which rules over me according to its owngood pleasure, than I can truly find You therein…In no command do I belong tomen, but to You 44 .Rahner’s quiet acceptance <strong>of</strong> duty has little to do with any idealistic or legalistic notion <strong>of</strong>the unfailing wisdom and piety <strong>of</strong> his superiors, or the perfection <strong>of</strong> the communal life <strong>of</strong>the Society <strong>of</strong> Jesus. For Rahner, the order was the tangible point and structure in whichhe experienced his ‘innermost and most authentic relationship to God, his theology andall his other activity’45 .Central to <strong>this</strong> pr<strong>of</strong>ound sense <strong>of</strong> the order as a ‘spiritual home’ was the person andteaching <strong>of</strong> St Ignatius <strong>of</strong> Loyola. The spirituality <strong>of</strong> the exercises and the model <strong>of</strong>Ignatius enabled Rahner to transcend the realities <strong>of</strong> his experience <strong>of</strong> both the highs andlows <strong>of</strong> the human, and the political, dynamics <strong>of</strong> the order. It is somewhat ironic thatRahner developed his renewing theology, with all <strong>of</strong> its language <strong>of</strong> freedom and grace,in the context <strong>of</strong> a disciplined participation within the historic structure <strong>of</strong> a hierarchicalreligious community. This may imply a contradiction between the man and his message;however, those who become familiar with his thought and spiritual companionship willrecognise that, <strong>for</strong> Rahner, freedom and grace are experienced not through a particularconstruct, or social utopia. For Rahner, freedom and grace are experienced through theencounter with the immanent God who infuses life’s circumstances, as they are, with thetranscendent quality <strong>of</strong> loving presence and mystery. In the words <strong>of</strong> Johann BaptistMetz, a <strong>for</strong>mer student, colleague and critic,Rahner’s theology is the dogmatics <strong>of</strong> the ordinary, dare I say average, Christianconcerned with the history <strong>of</strong> his life—the mystical biography <strong>of</strong> an undramaticlife without great changes and conversions 46 .Rahner understood his vocation as primarily emerging from the context <strong>of</strong> his identity asa member <strong>of</strong> a priestly community and its intrinsic pastoral function.44 42, 43 & 44.45 Vorgrimler, Understanding Karl Rahner, 34.46 Cited in ibid, 22.13

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