event

Public lectures: Evangelisation by Local Missionaries - MAXIMUM ILLUD LECTURE SERIES

26

Mar

The FRS is holding a MAXIMUM ILLUD LECTURE SERIES from 26th March to 11th December in the Saint Joseph Seminary



MAXIMUM ILLUD LECTURE SERIES

One Hundred Years ago, Pope Benedict XV called for the missionary activity of the Church to be carried out in future by missionaries from the very countries and cultures being evangelised. This was welcomed by many and resisted by some, but was surely the cornerstone of the Church’s evangelising efforts for a century. To mark this centenary, the Faculty of Religious Studies of the University of Saint Joseph presents a lecture series exploring the history, theology and impact of this teaching, contained in Pope Benedict XV’s document Maximum Illud.

To mark this centenary, the Faculty of Religious Studies of the University of Saint Joseph presents a lecture series exploring the history, theology and impact of this teaching, contained in Pope Benedict XV’s document Maximum Illud.

Admissions free

Lectures will take place at 6:30PM in the Gratia Hall, Seminário de São José, Largo de Santo Agostinho, Macau.

Lectures will be in English but outlines will be available in Chinese at the beginning of each lecture and full lecture texts available in English and Chinese at the end of each evening.

Sessions:

26th March2019                     What was Maximum Illud and should we care?

30th April2019                       The ‘missio ad gentes’ and Matthew 28:18-20

29th May 2019                       Maximum Illud and the Catholicity of the Church

26th June 2019                     Dialogue and Proclamation within the context of “The Three Teachings” in
China

16th October 2019                Maximum Illud & Religious Congregations: the Struggle for the first
indigenous seminaries

13th November 2019           Minimising Maximum Illud: Early Resistance to  Missionary Inculturation
in China

20th January 2020             The role of the Catholic University in the ‘missio ad gentes’ in Asia