Hans Urs von Balthasar, Dare We Hope “That All Men Be Saved?” (San Francisco: Ignatius, 1988), 187. 21. Thomas F. Torrance, “Universalism or Election?” in SJT 2 (1949): 313–14 (310–18). 22. Low Christologies, or a least Christologies ...
MacDonald, Gregory. The Evangelical Universalist. 2nd ed. Eugene, OR:Cascade, 2012. MacDonald, Scott.“WhatIs Philosophical Theology?” In Arguing about Religion, edited by Kevin Timpe,17–29. NewYork: Routledge, 2009. Marshall,I. Howard.
that offer some more critical perspectives." --Book Jacket.
Associate Professor of Biblical and Systematic Theology James M Arcadi, James M. Arcadi, Assistant Professor of ... 3 4 5 6 As Tom McCall writes in An Invitation to Analytic Christian Theology , what is “ gathered under the label ...
After Jonathan Edwards is a collection of specially commissioned essays that track his intellectual legacies from the work of his immediate disciples that formed the New Divinity movement in colonial New England, to his impact upon European ...
This set of essays offers a fresh look at how Edwards's ideas were transmitted, received, and reworked in the different phases of the life of the New England Theology.
... considering church-based ministry in the twenty-first century. To use the parlance of preaching itself, Bonhoeffer's lectures speak to our situation. 1. The Obsession with Relevance First, they speak to our obsession for relevance.
Most of the essays herein are sympathetic toward the enterprise the editors are calling analytic theology; but, with an eye toward balance, the volume also includes essays and an introduction that try to offer more critical perspectives on ...
Analytic theology is a flourishing new theological movement, addresses itself to the intersection between philosophy and theology.
The purpose of this volume is to offer an authoritative overview of the positive relationship between faith and reason, the latter understood as different mode of philosophy.
This volume will show how various intellectual disciplines (most found within the modern university) can learn from theology and philosophy in primarily methodological and substantitive terms.
He considers the notion of divine kenosis or self-emptying, and discusses non-Incarnational Christology, focusing on the work of John Hick.
Oliver Crisp examines the doctrine of the incarnation as one of the central and defining dogmas of the Christian faith.
In recent years there has been a flowering of interest in the work of Jonathan Edwards. In the last decade this has been encouraged by the publication of many previously unavailable manuscripts, in the Yale edition of Edwards' works.
In order not to burden the text that follows with the cumbersome term “theologically realist systematic theology” I ... major multivolume works of systematic theology currently being undertaken by theologians like Sarah Coakley and ...
Theologian Oliver Crisp explores the meaning of the cross and the various ways that the death of Jesus has been interpreted in the church's history—from ransom theory in the early church to penal substitutionary theory to more recent ...
This collection of studies in theology is written from the perspective of one from within the Christian faith, and seeking greater understanding of the doctrinal deposit of that faith.
who have tried to have him killed, he says to them, 'You intended to harm me, but God intended it for good to ... God intended his brother's choice to harm Joseph for a greater good, whereas his brothers intended their action for his ...
... sinful desires. Only things external to him can provide avenues of temptation (e.g., the Devil).17 Combined with the distinction between 'innocent' and 'sinful' temptations, it becomes clear that the only class of temptations Christ ...
Crisp has a finely honed theological and philosophical mind. This is one of the most important recent treatments of the doctrine of the atonement.