 Downloadable MP3 files of material from the past...
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A MP3 downloadable audio file of a presentation Gil Bailie made November 13, 2012 at the Dominican School of Philosophy and Theology.
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Price: Free downloadable audio file
In the final sessions from the Montserrat talks Gil Bailie explores "the person" through reflections on the Church's Christological and Trinitarian debates; and finally ends on the source and summit of Christian existence and experience the Eucharist.
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Price: Free downloadable audio file
Gil Bailie returns to the theme of our 'situatedness' in history. Using the Biblical metaphors of 'a Pharaoh that knew not Joseph' and 'the salt that has lost it savor' Mr. Bailie explores the plight of Jews in Europe as well as the Church in the world.
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Price: Free downloadable audio file
Gil examines Holy Saturday with the help of Hans Urs von Balthasar's theology and follows with the reality of the bodily resurrection of Christ as the basis of a hope that encompasses each person individually as well as the entire creation.
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Price: Free downloadable audio file
Exploring imitation and mimesis via the biblical understanding of humanity's creation in the "image and likeness of God". Human freedom is seen as God's risk for love even as Christ takes up the depths of human sinfulness and returns with forgiveness.
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Price: Free downloadable audio file
From the Montserrat Retreat series given in December 2009 - Gil Bailie reflects on human origins through the images of the 'Angelus' paintings by Millet and Dali.
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Price: Free downloadable audio file
The first of a series of talks given by Gil Bailie in December 2009 at the Montserrat Jeusit Retreat Center, Dallas, TX.
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Price: Free downloadable audio file
A downloadable MP3 audio file recording of the expanded remarks of Gil Bailie given at the University of Notre Dame conference "The Summons of Freedom - Virtue, Sacrifice, and the Common Good" in November 2009
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Price: Free downloadable audio file
A MP3 downloadable audio file of the complete text of Gil Bailie's paper prepared for the Colloquium on Violence and Religion conference held July 8-12 2009 at St. Mary's University College, London, England.
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Price: Free downloadable audio file
A downloadable MP3 audio file recording of the expanded remarks of Gil Bailie given at a luncheon in honor of the Archbishop of San Francisco George Niederaurer and Rene Girard in Palo Alto, CA August 21, 2009
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Price: Free downloadable audio file
Gil Bailie's presentation at St. Patrick's Seminary & Universtiy, Menlo Park, CA, May 26, 2009
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Price: Free downloadable audio file
Gil Bailie's presentation at the Dominican School of Philosophy and Theology in Berkeley, CA, April 29, 2009
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Price: Free downloadable audio file
Gil Bailie's presentation March 25th 2009 at the Dominican School of Philosophy and Theology, Berkeley, CA
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Price: Free downloadable audio file
René Girard’s contribution to this question is indispensable to the task which the Second Vatican Council implicitly assigned to us, namely, that of developing a theological anthropology.
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Price: Free downloadable audio file
The Milky Way is an Intergalactic Nazareth if ever there was one, as insignificant in cosmic terms as is our solar system with it. How laughable it is to think that God – if there is one – would be the least bit interested in hominids and their ilk.
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Price: Free downloadable audio file
Henri de Lubac has asserted that we live in a time of “deliberate barbarism” precisely to the degree that we are guilty of the “deliberate refusal of history.” In this Emmaus Road session we will ask: What is the nature and meaning of human history.
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Price: Free downloadable audio file
The Bible tells us that humans are made in the image and likeness of God. In this session of the E.R.I. we will discuss how this becomes the single-most salient touchstone for understanding the origin and meaning of human existence.
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Price: Free downloadable audio file
History consists – in the words of Hans Urs von Balthasar – of the mutual intensification of the Yes and the No to Christ, a view made anthropologically intelligible by René Girard’s extraordinary insights into history and culture.
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