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Alphabetical [« »] cults 1 cultural 19 culturally 1 culture 50 cultures 8 curing 2 curiosity 1 | Frequency [« »] 53 being 52 was 51 between 50 culture 48 divine 48 he 48 jesus | Pontifical Council for Culture; Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue Jesus Christ the bearer of the water of life IntraText - Concordances culture |
Part.Chapter.Topic.Paragraph
1 Fwd | aspects of contemporary culture.~The study is a provisional 2 Fwd | Pontifical Councils for Culture and for Interreligious Dialogue ( 3 1.1 | contemporary (particularly western) culture, and it is hard to see clearly 4 1.1 | reaction to contemporary culture, there are many ways in 5 1.1 | ways in which it is that culture's child. The Renaissance 6 1.1 | values espoused by enterprise culture and the “prosperity Gospel” ( 7 1.1 | and also by the consumer culture, whose influence is clear 8 1.1 | with the values of modern culture. Freedom, authenticity, 9 1.3 | trend in modern Western culture which has given space to 10 1.4 | Christian revelation. In Western culture in particular, the appeal 11 1.5 | experiences; the industrial culture of unrestrained individualism, 12 2.0 (10)| Age Religion and Western Culture. Esotericism in the Mirror 13 2 | deliberate challenge to modern culture. It is a syncretistic structure 14 2 | identifiable reaction to mainstream culture, so the word “movement” 15 2.1 | the world itself as in our culture, in the way we relate to 16 2.1 | active role in changing culture and bringing about a new 17 2.1 (14)| Alternative Religion and Culture, 1: 2-3 (1992), Stanford 18 2.1 | ideas and values in western culture, and yet its idealistic 19 2.1 | ironically typical of the culture it criticizes.~A word needs 20 2.1 | movement” to penetrate Western culture were the remarkable festival 21 2.1 | established part of mainstream culture, affecting such diverse 22 2.1 | art and religion. Western culture is now imbued with a more 23 2.3.2 | shared a kind of esoteric culture. In this world-view, the 24 2.3.2 | integrated with aspects of modern culture, including the search for 25 2.3.4.1 | basic themes of esoteric culture are also present in the 26 2.4 | than history”?: New Age and culture~(43) “Basically, the appeal 27 2.4 | possibility of a sound religious culture. Three points bring this 28 2.4 | pseudo-Orientalisation” of Western culture. Furthermore, it is hardly 29 2.4 | alternatives to Western culture. Traditional science and 30 2.4 | for an integral religious culture, and for something more 31 2.5 | exaltation of diversity. Western culture has taken a step beyond 32 2.5 (48)| the World Commission on Culture and Development, Paris ( 33 2.5 | global nature of contemporary culture, economics and politics. 34 3.1 | an alternative to Western culture and its Judaeo-Christian 35 3.1 | encounter between esoteric culture and psychology (cf. 2.32). 36 3.4 (59)| Conference Committee for Culture: Frente a una Nueva Era. 37 6.1 | levels of the “alternative” culture which has an extraordinarily 38 6.1 | distinguished in Western culture. Is it, perhaps, fair to 39 6.1 (89)| Parapsychology, and American Culture, New York (Oxford University 40 6.2 (92)| The Pontifical Council for Culture has published a handbook 41 6.2 | pressures of the dominant culture to bury these gifts (cf. 42 7.1 | completely new planetary culture. ~Heelas (p. 226) Jeremy 43 7.1 | time anchored in their own culture and open to a universal 44 7.2 (98)| Episcopal Committee for Culture, op. cit. ~ 45 8 | Conference Committee for Culture, Frente a una Nueva Era. 46 9.1 | Society and the Rising Culture,~Toronto (Bantam) 1983. ~ 47 9.2 | Age Religion and Western Culture. Esotericism in the Mirror 48 9.2 | 1994. ~World Commission on Culture and Development, Our Creative 49 9.2 | the World Commission on Culture and Development, Paris~( 50 9.2 | Alternative Religion and Culture, 1:2-3 (1992) Stanford CA. ~