Back to All Events

Does Tradition Live? Do Doctrines ‘Develop’?

Trinity College Dublin

The Thomistic Institute at Trinity College Dublin and the Catholic Chaplaincy present a lecture by Prof. Lewis Ayres of Durham University titled “Does Tradition Live? Do Doctrines ‘Develop’?”

Thursday, November 17

7:00 PM

Uí Chadain Theatre (Room 2041B) in the Arts Block

This lecture is free and open to the public.

About the Speaker:

Lewis Ayres is Professor of Catholic and Historical Theology at Durham University in the United Kingdom. He specializes in the study of early Christian theology, especially the history of Trinitarian theology and early Christian exegesis. He is also deeply interested in the relationship between the shape of early Christian modes of discourse and reflection and the manner in which renewals of Catholic theology during the last hundred years have attempted to engage forms of modern historical consciousness and sought to negotiate the shape of appropriate scriptural interpretation in modernity, even as they remain faithful to the practices of classical Catholic discourse and contemplation.

His publications include Augustine and the Trinity (2010) and Nicaea and Its Legacy: An Approach to Trinitarian Theology (2004). He is co-editor of the Cambridge History of Early Christian Literature (2004) and of the Oxford Handbook of Catholic Theology (forthcoming). Professor Ayres has co-edited the Blackwell Challenges in Contemporary Theology series (since 1997), the Ashgate Studies in Philosophy and Theology in Late Antiquity series (since 2007), and has just co-founded with Fortress Press the Renewal: Conversations in Catholic Theology series. He serves on the editorial boards of Modern Theology, the Journal of Early Christian Studies, and Augustinian Studies. He has also served on the board of the North American Patristics Society.

Previous
Previous
November 17

The Unintended Reformation: How a Religious Revolution Led to a Secular Modernity

Next
Next
November 17

Visions of the Blessed Life: Dante's Purgatorio and Aquinas' Virtues