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Father Tyrrell's Dogmas

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

Julius I. Bella
Affiliation:
Bridgeport, Conn.

Extract

Father Tyrrell is one of the foremost exponents of Roman Catholic Modernism, the attempt to reconcile Roman Catholicism and modern culture. Roman Catholic Modernism is not a system, a coherent whole proceeding from a philosophical foundation, not a body of doctrine, but rather an “orientation,” a “method.” It does not form a school, but rather consists “of a number of individual attempts to set forward a revision of traditional orthodoxy.” Such attempt is made by Laberthonnière, LeRoy, Loisy in France, by Murri, Fogazzaro in Italy, and von Hügel and Tyrrell in England.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Church History 1939

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References

1 The principal source for Tyrrell's life is his Autobiography, and the Life of George Tyrrell, by Petre, M. D., publ., as Autobiography and Life of George Tyrrell, (2 vols., London, 1912.)Google Scholar See also, George Tyrrell's Letters, ed. by Petre, M. D. (London, 1920)Google Scholar; Vidler, A. R., The Modernist Movement in the Roman Church (Cambridge, 1934)Google Scholar; Loisy, A., George Tyrrell, et Henri Brémond (Paris, 1936)Google Scholar; Loisy, A., Mémoires, (3 vols., Paris, 1930)Google Scholar; May, J. L., Father Tyrrell and the Modernist Movement (London, 1927)Google Scholar; also the different histories of the Roman Catholic Modernism.

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