How central is narrative to Christology? To human experience?
In exploring these questions Michal Cook maintains in Christology as Narrative Quest the primacy and centrality of narrative in communicating the significance of Jesus Christ, and demonstrates ways in which narrative” in four faith images has played a role in the shaping of Christology. These forms and their texts are: biblical (the Gospel of Mark); creedal (the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed); systematic (Aquinas’ Summa theologiae); and social transformation (the “story” of Mexican-Americans.) all of these images are ways of using narrative imagery to connect idea and experience.
A detailed analysis reveals that each of these forms involve what well-known ethicist Alasdair MacIntyre calls a “narrative quest.” In each case an image of Jesus that is fundamental for integrating a particular form of the “narrative quest” emerges.
Father Cook contends that Christology in any age is the culture-specific faith response of the community of believers/disciples (Church) to the mystery of the risen Jesus a mystery that, identified with the very life, activity, and presence of God, simply transcends any attempt we make, whether biblical, creedal, systematic, or societal, to bring it to expression.
The four faith images (biblical, creedal, systematic, social transformation) and their texts broadly correspond to significant periods in the history of Christianity: the Jewish-Gentile Church, the Hellenistic-Byzantine (imperial) Church, the Latin-Western (papal) Church, and the contemporary, post-Vatican II emergence of the world-wide Church.
Graduate students, academicians, and others who want a scholarly or professional reference work will appreciate this substantive look into the relationship of narrative and Christology.
Chapters examine the four faith images. They are “The Centrality of Narrative in Christology,” “A Biblical Image: ‘The Beloved Son’ in the Gospel of Mark,” “A Creedal Image: ‘The Pre-Existent Son’ in the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed,” “A Systematic Image: ‘The Incarnate Word’ in the Summa theologiae of Thomas Aquinas,” and “A Social Transformation Image: ‘The Rejected Prophet’ in the Mexican-American Experience.”
Michael L. Cook, SJ, ThD, is a professor of theology at Gonzaga University. He also taught at the Jesuit School of Theology in Berkeley and was a visiting professor at the Catholic University in Santiago, Chile. He is the author of Responses to 101 Questions About Jesus.

410 LOURDES -23CM
GIRLS TALK
L-EVANGELJU SKOND SAN MARK
COME HOLY SPIRIT
393- 13CM ANGELWITH BOY
PRO-LIFE REFLECTIONS FOR EVERY DAY
WHAT GOD HAS JOINED
THE BOOK OF INFINITITE LOVE
846 - ACQUASANTIERA C/MADONNA 16CM
LISTENING WITH THE HEART
PALM OF MY HAND (135)
31CM LOURDES 882
WHAT'S YOUR FAVOURITE COLOR?
STORIES JESUS TOLD
GHALLIMNA NITOLBU.L-EZERCIZZI TA' SAN IN
890ABC FATIMA CHILDREN 16CM
MAGNET CERAMICA CIRCLE
THE JOYFUL MYSTERIES OF LIFE
THE CATHOLIC WORKER MOVEMENT
CALEB IN JESUS IS OUR BEST FRIEND
GOD'S INVISIBLE HAND
THE FAITH OF PARENTS
657 - STATUE 17CM ST.JOSEPH 17CM
THE CATECHISM OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH ON
MANY THINGS IN PARABLES
SIEGHA MAL-MULEJ
GABY IN JESUS WATCHES OUR HEART
31CM ST. JOSEPH 883
31CM SAN FRANCESCO 885
A CATECHUMEN'S COMPANION
18CM PADRE PIO 661
CATHOLICS,MARRIAGE AND DIVORCE:REAL PEOP
JESUS THE HUMAN AND HUMANE FACE OF GOD 

