Lexikon für Theologie und Kirche

Lexikon für Theologie und Kirche (Lexicon of Theology and the Church; commonly abbreviated LThK) is a German-language Catholic theological encyclopedia. Three editions have appeared so far, all published by Herder-Verlag in Freiburg im Breisgau.

First edition: 1930 to 1938

The first edition of the Lexikon was edited by Michael Buchberger, Bishop of Regensburg, between 1930 and 1938. It was an emended and expanded version of an earlier work in two volumes entitled Kirchliches Handlexikon (Munich, 1904–1912). The editor's goal was to create a modern summa theologiae, i.e. a reference work that would cover all aspects of Catholic teaching, life and practice. This edition contained 10 volumes.

Second edition: 1957 to 1968

The second edition of the work was prepared between 1957 and 1968 by Josef Höfer and Karl Rahner. At that time, the Catholic Church was experiencing drastic changes, culminating in the Second Vatican Council. As a result, the ten volumes of the encyclopedia and the additional volume containing the index were supplemented by three volumes containing the complete texts of the decrees of the council (in Latin and in German). The complete edition, thus, comprised 14 volumes, and had approximately 22,000 articles.

Third edition: 1993 to 2001

The third edition was edited by Cardinal Walter Kasper between 1993 and 2001. This edition contains 10 volumes and an additional index volume; altogether it contains approximately 26,000 articles on 8,292 pages. Topics covered include all aspects of Catholic theology, doctrine, history and practice, as well as other subjects related to the Roman Catholic church and Roman Catholicism in general.

gollark: I *think* once you create a 3D object around a center point its origin is fixed until you recenter it, but obviously you can move.
gollark: I think you don't actually have enough data to. Unless you constantly use GPS.
gollark: You'd probably want them to only be clickable with a keyboard out though.
gollark: It's a shame it'd be so annoying to register clicks on 3D objects when you're using the keyboard. We could have virtual 3D-positioned touchscreens.
gollark: I think 3D is relatively new in mainline plethora though.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.