Accueil
Titre : | Readings in Christian Theology |
Auteurs : | Peter C. Hodgson, Éditeur scientifique ; Robert H. King, Éditeur scientifique |
Type de document : | texte imprimé |
Editeur : | Minneapolis [USA] : Fortress Press, 1985 |
ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-0-8006-1849-0 |
Format : | xi + 418 p. |
Langues: | Anglais |
Index. décimale : | CV/A (Introduction à la théologie chrétienne) |
Résumé : |
From Augustine to Gutierrez, from Creation to Eschatology, this volume:
• provides a rich selection of the most important readings from classical, modern, and contemporary theologians • covers all the major doctrines of Christian belief • is carefully edited to provide key passages and concentrated readings • can be used in conjunction with such introductions as Christian Theology and Reconstructing Christian Theology |
Note de contenu : |
- Preface
- I. Theology: 1. Farley: Theologia—The History of a Concept 2. Ogden: What Is Theology? - II. Scripture and Tradition: 1. Origen: The Threefold Sense of Scripture 2. Calvin: With the Aid of Spectacles 3. Möhler: Tradition as the Living Word 4. Hodge: The Protestant Rule of Faith 5. Rahner: Scripture as the Church’s Book 6. Kelsey: The Function of Scripture - III. God: 1. Gregory of Nyssa: On the Trinity 2. Anselm: The Attributes of God 3. Thomas Aquinas: Language About God 4. Hartshorne: The Divine Relativity 5. Barth: The Humanity of God 6. Tillich: Theism Transcended - IV. Revelation: 1. Augustine: Revelation as Illumination 2. Luther: Revelation by Word and Spirit 3. Tindal: Reason and Revelation 4. Barth: Revelation as God’s Self-Disclosure 5. Bultmann: Revelation and Human Existence 6. Rahner: The Supernatural Existential 7. Pannenberg: Revelation and History 8. Niebuhr: The Revelatory Image - V. Creation and Providence: 1. Augustine: In the Beginning God Created 2. Calvin: God’s Providence Governs All 3. Spinoza: Deus Sive Natura, Causa Omnium 4. Hegel: Without the World God Is Not God 5. Ford: Divine Persuasion 6. Tillich: God’s Originating, Sustaining, and Directing Creativity - VI. Human Being: 1. Augustine: Body, Soul, Will, and the Image of God 2. Schleiermacher: The Human Subject 3. Barth: Christ and Adam 4. Niebuhr: Human Beings as Creatures and Sinners 5. Rahner: Persons as Free and Responsible Subjects - VII. Sin and Evil: 1. Augustine: Free Will and Sin 2. Luther: Sin and Grace 3. Tennant: Difficulties in the Classic Doctrine 4. Kierkegaard: Sin as Despair 3. Niebuhr: The Pride of Power 6. Ricoeur: Paradox of the Servile Will 7. Farrer: Beyond Augustinian Theodicy - VIII. Christ and Salvation: 1. The Nicene Creed: Homousios with the Father 2. Athanasius: Truly Human, Truly God 3. The Chalcedonian Definition: One Person, Two Natures 4. Anselm: The Logic of Atonement 5. Schleiermacher: The Work of Christ 6. Bultmann: Faith in the Cross 7. Barth: Lord as Servant, Servant as Lord 8. Moltmann: The Crucified God - IX. The Church: 1. Cyprian: The Unity of the Church 2. Thomas Aquinas: The Soul of the Church 3. The Second Helvetic Confession: Christ the Sole Head of the Church 4. Schleiermacher: The Fellowship of Believers 5. Gustafson: The Church as a Human Community 6. Paris: The Black Christian Tradition 7. Gutiérrez: Sacrament of Liberation - X. The Sacraments: 1. Cyril of Jerusalem: Christian Initiation 2. Ambrose: The Eucharistic Miracle 3. Luther: Baptism and Faith 4. Kant: Sacraments and the Moral Community 5. Schmemann: Christ Our Eucharist 6. Rahner: The Self-Communication of God - XI. The Spirit and the Christian Life: 1. Isaac of Syria: Directions on Spiritual Training 2. Thomas Aquinas: Action and Contemplation 3. John of the Cross and Teresa of Avila: The Mystical Way 4. Law: Call to a Devout and Holy Life 5. Rauschenbusch: Theology and the Social Gospel 6. Williams: Christian Spirituality - XII. The Kingdom of God and Life Everlasting: 1. Irenaeus: New Heavens and a New Earth 2. Origen: The Consummation of All Things 3. Augustine: The Eternal Happiness of the Saints 4. Schleiermacher: The Consummation of the Church and Personal Survival 5. Bultmann: Jesus Christ as the Eschatological Event 6. Tillich: Kairos 7. Pannenberg; Eschatology and the Experience of Meaning 8. Moltmann: The Resurrection as Hope - XIII. The Religions: 1. Justin Martyr: In Defense of Christianity 2. Troeltsch: The Absoluteness and Relativity of Christianity 3. Barth: Critique of Christianity as a Religion 4. Pannenberg: Christianity in the History of Religions 5. Cobb: Beyond Dialogue - XIV. The Christian Paradigm: Alternative Visions: 1. Niebuhr: Radical Monotheism 2. Cone: The Social Context of Theology 3. Gutiérrez: Orthopraxis, Not Orthodoxy 4. Ruether: The Prophetic, Iconoclastic Christ 5. Hick: One God, Many Images 6. Kaufman: Divine Power, Human Responsibility, and the Nuclear Threat - Acknowledgments - Index of Authors and Selections |
Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres | Cote | Support | Localisation | Section | Disponibilité |
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CV/A 017 | CV/A 017 | Livre | Bibliothèque principale | Livres empruntables | Prêt possible Disponible |