Nova et Vetera

Nova et Vetera is a theological review in the tradition of Thomism which focuses on contemporary issues facing the Roman Catholic Church. Published in the Swiss region of Romandy, the main language of the journal is French. It is also published in a distinct English edition founded by Matthew Levering in 2003. Its current co-editors are Matthew Levering of Mundelein Seminary and Thomas Joseph White of the Pontifical Faculty of St. Thomas Aquinas. The English edition is currently published by the St. Paul Center for Biblical Theology.

Nova et Vetera
DisciplineReligious studies
LanguageFrench, English
Edited byFr: Charles Morerod
En: Matthew Levering, Thomas Joseph White
Publication details
History1926–present
Publisher
Association Nova et Vetera/St. Paul Center for Biblical Theology
FrequencyQuarterly
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Nova Vetera
Links

Description

The English edition of Nova et Vetera is published quarterly and provides an international forum for theological and philosophical studies from a Thomistic perspective. It seeks to be "at the heart of the Church," faithful to the Magisterium and the teachings of the Second Vatican Council, and devoted to the work of true dialogue, both ecumenically and across intellectual disciplines. Nova et Vetera is a peer-reviewed journal.

The journal was founded in 1926 by future Cardinal Charles Journet in association with Jacques Maritain.

Authors who have published articles in the English edition of Nova et Vetera include a wide variety of eminent scholars such as Robert Barron, Richard Bauckham, Romanus Cessario, Georges Cottier, Archbishop Joseph Augustine Di Noia, Cardinal Avery Dulles, Francis George, Richard B. Hays, F. Russell Hittinger, William Kurz, Bruce Marshall, Francis Martin, Frank Matera, Edward T. Oakes, Michele Schumacher, Christopher Seitz, Janet E. Smith, Geoffrey Wainwright, Thomas Weinandy, Robert Louis Wilken, and Stephen B. Clark,[1] among many others.

gollark: Command-economy "communism", magic-utopia "communism", syndicalist "communism", ...?
gollark: <@!592730133119500347> Which communism do you mean?
gollark: Which they can *have*, because they have a *superintelligent AI*.
gollark: This is the claim I have heard, yes.
gollark: With sufficiently good imaging and such, I imagine you could probably look for signs of wiped out life or megastructures or whatever and determine if there actually is dark-forest-type stuff going on.

References

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