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Glad You Asked

Glad You Asked

Veröffentlicht: 2025-06-13
© 2022
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79 Folgen
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79 Folgen
Audio
Anhören auf Apple Podcasts
Veröffentlicht: 2025-06-13
© 2022
Aktuelle Folge
Dean Detloff – What is a Jubilee Year?

Dean Detloff – What is a Jubilee Year?

In February of 1300, Pope Boniface VIII, in the papal bull Antiquorum Habet Fida Relatio, declared the first-ever Catholic Jubilee Year. Anyone who made a pilgrimage to the tombs of the Apostles Peter and Paul in Rome, and who repented and confessed, wo
Länge: 43:43
In February of 1300, Pope Boniface VIII, in the papal bull Antiquorum Habet Fida Relatio, declared the first-ever Catholic Jubilee Year. Anyone who made a pilgrimage to the tombs of the Apostles Peter and Paul in Rome, and who repented and confessed, would receive “the fullest and broadest pardon for all sins committed,” Boniface proclaimed. One of the thousands of pilgrims who journeyed to Rome that year was the painter Giotto, who created a fresco commemorating the event. Another was the poet Dante Alighieri, who references the Jubilee in his Divine Comedy—ironically, this appears in Canto 18 of Inferno, where he compares the movement of the damned along the eighth circle of hell to the Roman method of traffic control during the Jubilee. 
The jubilee tradition goes back far further, however, originating in Judaism, before Christianity had even begun. In the Israelite tradition, the jubilee was associated with things like forgiving debts, freeing enslaved people, and other concrete gestures of material justice. In the Catholic tradition, however, the Jubilee focuses not on debt forgiveness but on forgiveness of sins. 
On this episode of Glad You Asked, the hosts talk with scholar Dean Detloff about the origins of the Jubilee Year, its significance in the Catholic tradition, and whether there is any likelihood that the Catholic Jubilee will recover its ancient tradition of concrete liberation. Detloff is the Research and Advocacy Officer for Development and Peace–Caritas Canada. He holds a PhD in philosophy from the Institute for Christian Studies in Toronto and the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, where he also teaches as sessional faculty.
You can learn more about this topic, and read some of Detloff’s work, in these links. 
What Is a Holy Year?
HISTORY
“This Jubilee year, be open to the gift of hope,” by Alice Camille
This Jubilee year, be open to the gift of hope - U.S. Catholic
“Take action against mass incarceration this Jubilee year,” by Alessandra Harris
Take action against mass incarceration this Jubilee year - U.S. Catholic
“Canada must lead global debt cancellation, like it did 25 years ago,” by Dean Detloff
Canada must lead global debt cancellation, like it did 25 years ago - The Hill Times
“Mourning a Pope We Often Ignored,” by Dean Detloff
Mourning a Pope We Often Ignored | Sojourners
“A May Day Saint,” by Dean Detloff
A May Day Saint | Commonweal Magazine
Glad You Asked is sponsored by the Claretian Missionaries.
Folgen-ID: 1000712776346
GUID: 3f7b1190-4ed8-4853-9fa8-c57a56decf6a
Erscheinungs­datum: 13.6.2025, 19:47:00

Beschreibung

Have you ever had a question about Catholicism that you couldn’t find an easy answer to? Or a question about a teaching or tradition that seemed to have five different answers, none of them satisfactory? Or maybe you even had a question you felt you weren’t allowed to ask. The new podcast from U.S. Catholic, Glad You Asked, may be just what you are looking for. Join U.S. Catholic editors Emily Sanna and Rebecca Bratten Weiss as they explore the questions about Catholicism that don't have easy answers.

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