“DeLorenzo makes a singular contribution to the needed ‘recovery of an eschatological imagination’ for contemporary Christians. He brings new depth and clarity to the issue, both analytically and synthetically. A most impressive piece of scholarship, in which theology and spirituality enrich one another.” —Rev. Robert P. Imbelli, author of Rekindling the Christic Imagination
"Work of Love: A Theological Reconstruction of the Communion of Saints is a masterly contribution by a promising young theologian. Building upon and irenically critiquing Thiel and Johnson, DeLorenzo shows why the communion of saints is not a mere pious add-on to Catholic theology, but instead belongs to its very heart. Today we are facing an urgent need to retrieve the theology of the communion of saints, lest our ecclesiology and pastoral practice wither away on a merely sociological vine. This book is a major first step toward revitalizing the core of Christian communio." —Matthew Levering, James N. and Mary D. Perry, Jr. Chair of Theology, Mundelein Seminary
"Leonard DeLorenzo’s Work of Love attends to limitations in our modern ways of thinking and imagining the world. His 'lives of the saints' is no mere gloss over our fragmented world. In his study, the saints are living and active as we begin to see the deep connection between holiness and communion, between our good end in God and God’s ever-active presence to the world." —David M. McCarthy, Fr. James M. Forker Professor of Catholic Social Teaching, Mount St. Mary’s University
"For Protestant readers, Work of Love is . . . a chance to experience the doctrine of the communion of saints in its Catholic fullness, to see how the veneration of one’s forebears in the faith might attest to and not distract from a robust belief in Christ’s Godhood. Most of all, though, the book is a work of love because it teaches us how to think about our own dead—that ever-lengthening mental list of people who, in their friendship or antagonism or both, give us bits of ourselves, then leave." —Christian Century
“DeLorenzo delves back into the Trinitarian nature of God, the Paschal Mystery, and the ultimate meaning of our own death to imagine a connectedness of holiness transcending time and space. This text is meticulously researched and flawlessly written . . . highly recommended for all theological and academic libraries.” —Catholic Library World
“DeLorenzo’s book accomplishes a great deal in this book’s middle chapters by welcoming many voices to the conversation – Karl Rahner, Joseph Ratzinger, Hans Urs von Balthasar, N.T. Wright, Augustine, and others. But his main contribution is to make readers feel the size of the gap between God as creator and God as the creator’s dead child.” —Christian Century
“DeLorenzo’s book about the saints shines new light on the whole of the human life within Christ. It will certainly benefit any preacher who wants a better sermon for All Saints, for Holy Week, or for funerals.” —Anglican Theological Review
“DeLorenzo has made a substantial contribution to contemporary Roman Catholic theology in this complex volume, one that fruitfully links modern reactions to the ultimate reality of death with traditional and contemporary scriptural and theological perspectives on Jesus Christ’s death and Resurrection." —Reading Religion
“He sees more deeply into this perennial belief of the Catholic Church about the Communion of Saints than I have seen treated elsewhere. Her criticizes how our modern secular culture deals with death with this belief.” —Theological Studies