Hans Küng
Erkämpfte Freiheit: Erinnerungen.
Munich: Piper, 2002. First edition. 3492044441 620 pages.
Volume, measuring approximately 6.25" x 9.5", is bound in black paper spine and boards, with stamped black and red lettering to gray spine label. Book and dust jacket are like new. Jacket is preserved in mylar cover.
"Hans Küng is undoubtedly one of the most important theologians of our time, but he has always been a controversial figure, and as a result of a much-publicized clash over papal infallibility had his permission to teach revoked by the Vatican. Yet at seventy-five years of age Küng is also something of a senior statesman, one of the "Group of Eminent Persons" convened by United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan, and a friend of heads of government like Britain's Tony Blair and President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt.
In this autobiography Kung gives a frank and outspoken account of the first four decades of his life. He tells of his youth in Switzerland and his decision to become a priest, of his doubts and struggles as he studied in Rome and Paris, and of his experiences as a professor in Tubingen, where he received a chair at the early age of thirty-one. Most importantly, as one of the last surviving eyewitnesses of Vatican II, Küng gives an authentic account of the conflicts behind the scenes. Here it becomes clear just how major an influence he was, to the point of shaping the Council's agenda and drafting speeches for bishops to deliver in plenary sessions.
Küng's book offers an acute analysis, compelling in its drama, of meetings with presidents like John F. Kennedy, popes like John XXIII and Paul VI, great theologians like Karl Barth and Karl Rahmer, and journeys around the world. It paints a moving picture of Küng's personal convictions, including his relentless struggle for a Christianity characterized not by the domination of an official church but by Jesus."
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