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EN
The paper attempts to present the role of Jan Hus and of the Hussite movement in the Czechoslovak Church (CSC), known as the Czechoslovak Hussite Church (CSHC) as of 1971. It notes that after the creation of CSC in 1920 a rather romantic reminiscence of Jan Hus prevailed in the church nourished by Masaryk’s ideal of humanity, which gave rise to a broad symbolic, liturgical, artistic and partly ideological formation. It describes the disintegration of identity in the CSC in the totalitarian crises of the Czechoslovak state in the period of Nazism and Communism, and how CSC helped overcome these crises by symbols and ideas of the Hussite tradition, and how the idea of the extension of the name of CSC through the term "Hussite" was born at the end of the 1960s. It was adopted by the Church during the sixth Assembly of CSC in 1971. This decision had a remarkable effect on the quality and professionalism of the study of Hus’ works and other texts coming from the Hussite tradition.
EN
The paper concentrates on Karel Statečný’s contribution to the field of moral theology and ethics. It evaluates the current discourse on Statečný’s life and work, his activity in the Department of Moral Theology in České Budějovice and his attempt to establish a new concept of ethics. Finally, it sets out a hypothesis regarding the persistence of the Statečný’s concept of ethics in the Czechoslovak Church after his death in 1927.
Studia theologica
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2012
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vol. 14
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issue 4
240–250
EN
This paper deals with the development of the theme of unclean spirits in the theology of the Czechoslovak Hussite Church. The generation of the founders of the church, influenced by radical Modernism, rejected the existence of unclean spirits, and the question of the origin of evil in the world was solved with a reference to privatio boni. The following theological generation pointed out that the theme of evil powers is directly connected with the message of redemption in Jesus Christ, based on the model, “Nullus diabolus, nullus redemptor.” Despite the fact that the theology of the CSHC re-opened the question of unclean spirits, it has never officially treated the subsequent question concerning possession and exorcism, although this phenomenon can also be marginally found in the Church.
Studia theologica
|
2011
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vol. 13
|
issue 4
127-136
EN
The study compares the concept of the natural law according to the ITC document: The Search for Universal Ethics: A New Look at Natural Law with similar terms used in the theology of the Czechoslovak Hussite Church – in particular the terms moral law, humanity, freedom of conscience. The main differences amongst these concepts are seen in different attitudes toward natural theology. The author sees a fundamental agreement in an attempt to state certain general human common ethical principles, which are also based on significant cultural and religious traditions, in order to strengthen interpersonal coexistence in a global context.
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