Gaudium et Spes, Vatican II’s Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World, marked fundamental shifts in ethical methodology, in how we do ethics in the Catholic tradition, and in how we think about ethical and ecclesial issues in the Catholic Church in the modern world.
On the document’s fiftieth anniversary, this book explores the historical origins of Gaudium et Spes, its impact on the Church’s ecclesial self-understanding, andits implications for doing Catholic theological ethics for the specific ethical issues of marriage, social justice, politics, and peacebuilding.
The book engages in the ongoing communal discernment of the aggiornamento sought by the council’s convener, Pope John XXIII, seeking to bring the Church up to date in the twenty-first century.
Michael G. Lawler is Amelia and Emil Graff Professor Emeritus of Catholic Theology at Creighton University. He has published twenty-two books and more than 150 scholarly essays on topics related to sacraments, marriage, and sexuality. He is the co-author with Todd A. Salzman of The Sexual Person: Toward a Renewed Catholic Anthropology, a Catholic Press Association 2009 book award winner.
Todd A. Salzman is professor of theology at Creighton University. He is co-author with Michael G. Lawler of Sexual Ethics: A Theological Introduction and has published over sixty scholarly articles in journals such as Theological Studies, Studia Moralia, Heythrop Journal, and Louvain Studies.
Eileen Burke-Sullivan, STD, holds the Barbara Reardon Heaney Chair inPastoral Liturgical Theology and is associate professor of theology at CreightonUniversity. She has lectured and published widely on liturgical, spiritual, and ecclesial topics and is co-author of The Ignatian Tradition, published byLiturgical Press.