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J rgen Moltmann's distinctive insights in trinitarian theology - especially about the relations within God and God's presence in creation - are revolutionary for theology and set the stage for these further explorations. The esteemed group of contributors in this volume probes new ways of understanding the triune character of God. Among the contributors are: Nicholas Constas Sarah A. Coakley Harvey G. Cox Jr. Lyle Dabney David Fergusson David H. Kelsey Daniel Migliore Gerald O'Collins John Polkinghorne William Schweiker Dirk Smit Bryan D. Spinks Kathryn Tanner Ronald F. Thiemann Miroslav Volf John Webster Nicholas Wolterstorff… (más)
Información procedente del conocimiento común inglés.Edita para encontrar en tu idioma.
Being as God is / Miroslaf Volf: It is obvious but not trite to state that the triune God stands at the beginning and at the end of the Christian pilgrimage and, therefore, at the center of Christian faith.
The social trinity and property / M. Douglas Meeks: Jürgen Moltmann's most enduring contribution to Christian theology is arguably his doctrine of the Trinity.
The Spirit of Life and the reverence for life / William Schweiker: Jürgen Moltmann has argued that there is a necessary connection between the experience of the God of life and reverence for life.
"Speak, 'Friend,' and enter" / Nancy Elizabeth Bedford: When I was an adolescent, my best friend was almost mute, which is what made our closeness possible.
Wisdom, theological anthropology, and modern secular interpretation of humanity / David H. Kelsey: Because both Christian theological anthropologies and several human and life sciences address the same descriptive question - What is a human being? - it is desirable that theological anthropologies be conceptually hospitable to anthropological claims warranted well by those sciences.
Jürgen Moltmann's engagement with the natural sciences / John Polkinghorne: When I was preparing to leave theoretical physics and begin the study of theology in preparation for ordination to the Anglican priesthood, someone recommended that I read The Crucified God: The Cross as the Foundation and Criticism of Christian Theology.
Church unity in freedom / Dirk J. Smit: The stateent about the church in the Apostles' Creed and the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed respectively, according to Jprgen Moltmann's The Church in the Power of the Spirit: A Contribution to Messianic Ecclesiology, "form a component part of the creed."
Make way for the spirit / Harvey G. Cox Jr.: Toward the end of the twelfth century C.E., an Italian Cistercian abbot named Joachim of Floris propounded an inventive doctrine of the Holy Trinity.
The Trinity and the theology of religions / Daniel L. Migliore: Rethinking the relationship between Christian faith and other religions is one of the most important tasks facing the church and theology in the twenty-first century.
Beyond exclusivism and absolutism / Ronald F. Thiemann: One of the enduring contributions that Jürgen Moltmann has made to contemporary theology is his thoroughgoing integration of a theologia crucis (theology of the cross) into trinitarian reflection upon God.
The Trinity and gender reconsidered / Sarah A. Coakley: One of the less celebrated dimensions of Jürgen Moltmann's thought as a systematic theologian is the significance that he has granted the category of gender, not only in the anthropological realm but also increasingly over the years in relation to his doctrine of God.
God's perfect life / John Webster: To speak of God's perfection is to speak of the fullness with which he is and acts as the one he is.
Divine providence and action / David Fergusson: The doctrine of providence occupies a pivotal place in most theological systems.
Spirit-Christology as access to trinitarian theology / Philip J. Rosato: This honorary chapter is both systematic in its argumentation and content and has a pastoral-ethical tone.
Is there justice in the Trinity? / Nicholas Wolterstorff: Most Christians, ancient, medieval, and modern, but especially modern, if they heard of the topic justice in the Trinity would regard thinking and writing about it as appalling.
Eschatology and Christology / Nicholas Constas: Jürgen Moltmann has made sustained, creative, and often provocative use of theological insights from the Greek Fathers, especially Basil of Caesarea, Gregory Nazianzus, and Gregory of Nyssa, collectively known as the Cappadocians.
John Donne on the Trinity / Gerald O'Collins: In writing his essay "Priest and Poet," Karl Rahner knew that one and the same person could be both priest and poet or, for that matter, theologian and poet.
Trinitarian belief and worship / Bryan D. Spinks: In Book I of the 1559 Institutes of the Christian Religion, John Calvin observed of the nature of God: When he proclaims his unity, he distinctly sets it before us as existing in three persons.
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Información procedente del conocimiento común inglés.Edita para encontrar en tu idioma.
Being as God is / Miroslaf Volf: But that is an exploration for another occasion.
"Speak, 'Friend,' and enter" / Nancy Elizabeth Bedford: As in the case of the disciples on the road to Emmaus, who were "talking and arguing among themselves" (Luke 24:15), in the midst of heated conversation we may unexpectedly find Jesus walking along with us - and our theology will be the better for it.
Wisdom, theological anthropology, and modern secular interpretation of humanity / David H. Kelsey: ...; and whenever it is construed as though it were part of such systems, the normative force of the narrative logic of Wisdom's creation story requires its bending when theological anthropology appropriates it so that it is deprived of its status as a systematic ontological or metaphysical claim.
Jürgen Moltmann's engagement with the natural sciences / John Polkinghorne: Be that as it may, we scientist-theologians are deeply grateful to have Jürgen Moltmann as so stimulating a conversation partner in the dialogue between those two great truth-seeking disciplines, science and theology.
Church unity in freedom / Dirk J. Smit: At the time, these words were taken over with gratitude fro a theological contemporary and friend from afar concerned with many of the struggles also threatening and challenging the South African churches.
The Trinity and the theology of religions / Daniel L. Migliore: We must withhold the robe of sanctity when it is sought as a cloak for violence and bloodshed.
The Trinity and gender reconsidered / Sarah A. Coakley: ..., that I am merely following their own principle that a serious engagement with the life of the Trinity involves, perforce, nothing less than "the new creation of all things through the Spirit of God.
God's perfect life / John Webster: Such sight of the perfection or excellence of God lies in our future; for the present, theological work remains spes quaerens intellectum.
Divine providence and action / David Fergusson: ...; yet if such revision leaves us with an alternative less intolerable, then embracing it will have some positive practical gains.
Spirit-Christology as access to trinitarian theology / Philip J. Rosato: The Son-Re-creator and the Spirit-Trans-creator expect them to be ready to do whatever is required, now and in the future, to witness to the righteousness of the Creator-Father (cf. 2 Cor. 5:21) before the unjustly motivated and the unjustly treated within history.
Eschatology and Christology / Nicholas Constas: In Professor Moltmann's eschatological and christological approach to creation, we have a new, nondominant way of looking and acting indebted to the legacy of the Greek fathers, who likewise sought to restore the balance between ourselves, God, and the wisely made creatures with which we share the planet.
John Donne on the Trinity / Gerald O'Collins: But, for all their differences, both Donne and MOltmann write about the Trinity with an intense conviction that nothing matters more than the Trinity in the distinctively Christian adventure to which they both witness.
J rgen Moltmann's distinctive insights in trinitarian theology - especially about the relations within God and God's presence in creation - are revolutionary for theology and set the stage for these further explorations. The esteemed group of contributors in this volume probes new ways of understanding the triune character of God. Among the contributors are: Nicholas Constas Sarah A. Coakley Harvey G. Cox Jr. Lyle Dabney David Fergusson David H. Kelsey Daniel Migliore Gerald O'Collins John Polkinghorne William Schweiker Dirk Smit Bryan D. Spinks Kathryn Tanner Ronald F. Thiemann Miroslav Volf John Webster Nicholas Wolterstorff