Theologian Criticized by Vatican Dies Sat Jan 1, 3:08 PM ET Europe - AP ROME - The Rev. Jacques Dupuis, a Belgian theologian whose book on religious plurality exploring salvation through non-Christian faiths was attacked by the Vatican (news - web sites), has died in Rome. He was 81.
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The theologian's work on pluralism drew the ire of the Vatican at a time when it was underlining the primacy of the Roman Catholic Church over other religions.
Asked what his ideas were, Dupuis said, "For me Jesus Christ is the universal savior, but at the same time I believe that in the divine plan the other religious traditions of the world have a positive contribution to make to humanity."
His book "Toward a Christian Theology of Religious Pluralism," first published in 1997, sought to reconcile the doctrine that only Christ brings salvation for mankind with pluralism that sees the possibility of salvation through other religons.
The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Vatican's guardian of orthodoxy, launched an investigation into the book — a sign that the Vatican was concerned he was suggesting one religion could be as good as another
Article found
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20050101/ap_on_re_eu/obit_dupuis">here.
The article goes on to say that he was forced into silence, while his ideas were attacked. He eventually signed a statement that said he'd insert Vatican criticisms into his book in exchange for escaping sanctions against him. It almost sounds like Galileo, no?
Once again, it's the Catholic Church declaring that it's way is the only way. All others are not worth saving.