Synopsis
My
Struggle for Freedom is the long-awaited autobiography
by one of the most important theologians of our time.
Hans Kung, author of such monumental books as The Catholic
Church and On Being a Christian, here takes readers through
the first four decades of his fascinating life.
Kung's
book offers a compelling account of his journeys around
the world and of his meetings with presidents like John
F. Kennedy, with popes like John XXIII and Paul VI, and
with great theologians like Karl Barth and Karl Rahner.
With its rich thought and vivid narrative, this autobiography
depicts Kung's formative years and—the famous theme
of his life—his struggle for a Christianity characterized
not by the domination of an official church but by Jesus.
Beginning
with his childhood and youth in Switzerland, Kung describes
his elite education at the papal Collegium Germanicum.
In revealing detail he discusses the strict regimentation
and repression of the Roman system and his ensuing conflicts
with the Catholic Church. Kung also openly shares his
experience of the event that stamped his career—the
Vatican's withdrawal in 1979 of his ecclesiastical teaching
permission because he opposed the Catholic doctrine of
papal infallibility.
Also
of great interest is the book's description of the Second
Vatican Council, where Kung served as a young theological
advisor. As one of the last surviving eyewitnesses of
Vatican II, Kung here gives an authentic account of the
conflicts behind the scenes. Thus this book is much more
than the self-portrait of a giant of Christian thought.
Tightly woven with many of the most significant movements
and moments in twentieth-century Christian history, Kung's
life story provides a valuable window into the developments
of contemporary theology and church life around the world.