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 Author Name: GUNTON C E (ED)
Title: Trinity, time, and church (O/P)
Binding: Hardcover Publisher: Eerdmans 2000 ISBN: 0802838995 / 9780802838995
ISBN: 9780802838995
[Number in stock: 1]
With the recent publication of his two-volume Systematic Theology, Robert W. Jenson has established himself as a distinctive voice in Christian theology. In Trinity, Time, and Church leading scholars from around the world and from diverse faith traditions critically engage the major themes of Jenson's thought. These rich essays both celebrate Jenson's theological achievement and probe what some of the authors regard as the more contentious of his contributions.
opens the volume with a personal memoir of Jenson's life and work. James J. Buckley,/b> outlines the general characteristics of Jenson's theological thought. C.R. Seitz offers in tribute to Jenson a Chrisitan reflection on the divine name YHWH. David Novak discusses the mutually informing dialogue that exists between theology and philosophy. Wolfhart Pannenberg weights in with his own perspective on the relationship between time, eternity, and the trinitarian God.
Douglas Knight explores Jenson's theological understanding of time. Colin E. Gunton examines the crucial concept of mediation - the connecting of God and the world - in Jenson's s systematic work.
Gabriel Fackre argues that the Lutheran Capax plays a vital role in shaping Jenson's theology. Christoph Schwobel,/b> offers remarks on the christological bases of Jenson's theology of culture. Gerhald O Forde looks closely at the contours of Jenson's soteriology. Tuomo Mannermaa examines Jenson's Systematic Theology from the standpoint of a researcher of Luther, giving special attention to Luther's and Jenson's respective work on the doctrine of justification and trinitarian ontology. Jeremy Ive,/b> discusses Jenson's provocative theology of history. Robert Louis Wilken,/b> explores the relationship between the Scriptures and the celebration of Pentecost in liturgy, an approach to theology that is very much Jensonian.
?Susan K. Ward, discusses Jenson's ecclesiology from a Roman Catholic perspective. A.N. Williams comments on Jenson's appropriation patristic and meieval theology. David S. Yeago lays bare the Lutheran context of Jenson's ecclesiology. Richard John Neuhaus shows the public scope and nature of Jenson's theological writings. Stanley Hauerwas shows why theology, in particular the work of Jenson, is so important for the field of ethics. Gilbert Meilaender, unravels Jenson's theological vision of politics. Geoffrey Wainwright writes on Jenson's theology of the sacraments. In a closing essay Carl E. Braaten looks at Jenson's views of eschatology and mission. The book is completed with a comprehensive Jenson bibliography.
Informed and challenging, Trinity, Time, and Church,/i> offers a solid introduction both to Jenson's own theology and to many of the central concerns of the Christian faith.
Colin E. Gunton is professor of Christian doctrine at King's Collage, London. He is also the author of The Triune Creation: A Historical and Systematic Study.
Trinity time church With recent publication his two volume
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