SALE: Browse over 500 books at up to 90% off. SHOP NOW!

Liturgical Press
My Account
Catholic Social Teaching Faith and Justice Ecology Ethics Parish Ministries Liturgical Ministries Preaching and Presiding Parish Leadership Seasonal Resources Worship Resources Sacramental Preparation Ritual Books Music Liturgical Theology The Liturgy of the Church Liturgy and Sacraments Liturgy in History Biblical Spirituality Old Testament Scholarship New Testament Scholarship Wisdom Commentary Little Rock Scripture Study The Saint John's Bible Ecclesiology and Ecumenism Church and Culture Sacramental Theology Systematic Theology Theology in History Aesthetics and the Arts Prayer Liturgy of the Hours Spirituality Biography/Hagiography Daily Reflections Spiritual Direction/Counseling Give Us This Day Benedictine Spirituality Cistercian Rule of Saint Benedict and Other Rules Lectio Divina Monastic Studies Monastic Interreligious Dialogue Oblates Monasticism in History Thomas Merton Religious Life/Discipleship Give Us This Day Worship The Bible Today Cistercian Studies Quarterly Loose-Leaf Lectionary Celebrating the Eucharist Bulletins
Liturgical Press

The Worshiping Body

Chenu, Liturgy and Sacraments

Edited by Joris Geldhof, Samuel Goyvaerts, and Tom McLean

The Worshiping Body
The Worshiping Body

eISBN: 9798400802065, E02065

Details: 216 pgs,
Publication Date: 06/15/2025
eBook  
$27.99
Paperback
$29.95
Quantity    
Add to Cart
In Stock
See chart below for bulk pricing for groups.

Discover the groundbreaking liturgical and sacramental scholarship of Marie-Dominique Chenu

Why is Chenu’s scholarship still relevant today? Like his slightly younger confrere Yves Congar, the French Dominican Marie-Dominique Chenu (1895-1990) was an important visionary of Catholic theology in the twentieth century. Long before scholars like Louis-Marie Chauvet, Chenu elaborated on the essential symbolic nature of sacramental mediation, on the operationality of grace through the liturgical celebration of Christ’s mysteries, and on the indispensable added value of the humanities for classical sacramental doctrine. In The Worshiping Body, scholars show how Chenu’s ideas on sacramental worship is foundational for any contemporary reflection on the dialogue between anthropology and theology.

The basis of this book is formed around five texts on liturgy and sacraments by Chenu, now available in English translation for the first time. The translations of these articles are alongside essays by expert scholars on contextualized themes that surface in Chenu’s essays and provide answers for how his contributions are both applicable and inspiring for today’s theological endeavors. This scholarship is relevant for liturgists as well as anyone interested in research on Vatican II and post Vatican II theology and Chenu’s important contributions to it.

Joris Geldhof is professor of liturgical studies and sacramental theology at the faculty of theology and religious studies, KU Leuven, Belgium. He is vice-dean for research and belongs to the research unit of pastoral and empirical theology. He also chairs the Liturgical Institute and acts as the editor-in-chief of the bilingual journal Questions Liturgiques. He is the author of Liturgy and Secularism: Beyond the Divide (Liturgical Press, 2018), Liturgical Theology as a Research Program (Brill), and Monotheism in Christian Liturgy (Cambridge University Press, 2023). Joris is also a past president of Societas Liturgica.

Samuel Goyvaerts is associate professor of liturgical studies and sacramental theology at the Tilburg School of Catholic Theology (TST), Tilburg University, The Netherlands. Recent publications of Goyvaerts are on pastoral liturgy, liturgical formation, and the relation between liturgy and church architecture. Goyvaerts also serves as vice-dean for education at his faculty, is a board member of Societas Liturgica, the Liturgical Institute, the Institute for Ritual and Liturgical Studies (IRiLiS) and co-editor of the international peer-reviewed journal Questions Liturgiques.

Tom McLean is a doctoral candidate in the faculty of theology and religious studies at KU Leuven, Belgium, writing his dissertation on the development of the sacramental theology of Edward Schillebeeckx. Recent publications have appeared in Louvain Studies, Questions Liturgiques, and The Heythrop Journal.

eISBN: 9798400802065, E02065

Details: 216 pgs,
Publication Date: 06/15/2025

Reviews

"This book offers a refreshing, perspective-rich, new look at a largely unknown Chenu."
Christian Bauer, University of Münster

"Eight expert theologians here elucidate and constructively build upon the sacramental-liturgical essays of Marie-Dominique Chenu, one of the most important but lesser-known figures in the ressourcement movement that shaped the documents of Vatican II and the ensuing renewal of the church and sacraments. I expect that, like myself, readers of this volume will arrive at a deep sense of gratitude—gratitude for Chenu’s courageous, learned, pastoral, and generative work. But gratitude, also, for this colloquium’s critical advancement of Chenu’s fecund insights into the bodily, symbolic, ritual character of liturgy, joining nature and mystery, anthropology and theology, history and revelation, culture and tradition."
Bruce T. Morrill, SJ, Distinguished Professor of Theology, Vanderbilt University Divinity School

"What a gift this book promises to be for the discipline of liturgical studies! Chenu was one of the trail blazing thinkers behind the liturgical renewal of Vatican II. He interpreted Aquinas with fresh eyes, confidently speaking from his (Chenu’s) own historical context. The editors and contributors take their cue from Chenu’s own priority of time, history, and the body in the study of sacraments and sacramentality. Publishing the five essays in English under one cover and including the thoughtful critique of eight contemporary scholars embodies Chenu’s own methodology of doing theology while keenly aware of the signs of the times. This book will be read and reread for years to come."
Judith M Kubicki, PhD, CSSF, Associate Professor Emerita, Fordham University