'Participating in God' claims that a doctrine of the Trinity cannot be developed in isolation from pastoral experience.
On the other hand, Scotus also wrote, for instance, that 'where creatures are concerned [God] is debtor ... to his generosity, in the sense that he gives creatures what their nature demands'.55 Tully Borland and T. Allan Hillman offer a ...
God's Beauty-in-Act addresses these issues, in part, by arguing that the redemptive-creative suffering and glorious resurrection of Christ are the nexus of God's being, beauty, and Christian living.
This book gets at the heart of the Christian life by considering some of the great truths of God's existence.
These are perennial questions about Calvin's theology which have been given new life by Gift theologians such as John Milbank, Graham Ward, and Stephen Webb.
They remain central to the challenges of mission in twenty-first- century America. ... Jesus's own ministry is Spirit-shaped, and at Pentecost the Spirit brings forth a new community of multilingual and multicultural witness to God's ...
Madigan and Levenson, Resurrection, 113. David Burnett (“'So Shall Your Seed Be'”) argues that Paul sees deification (quality of descendants, not merely quantity) in this passage. If he is right, it would further strengthen the argument ...
Participation in God: A Forgotten Strand in Anglican Tradition
In Heavenly Participation Boersma draws on the wisdom of great Christian minds ancient and modern -- Irenaeus, Gregory of Nyssa, C. S. Lewis, Henri de Lubac, John Milbank, and many others.
In this volume Scott Sunquist helps us understand this trinitarian perspective more deeply." --Stephen Bevans, SVD, Catholic Theological Union, Chicago "No mere pragmatic missiology, Scott Sunquist's book is replete with theology.
Some, especially Hamerton-Kelly, have followed René Girard's lead and argued that Paul was trapped in the “system of sacred violence”10 that is driven by “mimetic [imitative] violence and surrogate victimage”11 and rooted in the ...