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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Aspects of religions (non-Christian) > Theology > General
‘In the beginning was the Word,’ says the Gospel of John. This
sentence – and the words of all four gospels – is central to
the teachings of the Christian church and has shaped Western art,
literature and language, and the Western mind. Yet in the years
after the death of Christ there was not merely one word, nor any
consensus as to who Jesus was or why he had mattered. There were
many different Jesuses, among them the aggressive Jesus who scorned
his parents and crippled those who opposed him, the Jesus who sold
his twin into slavery and the Jesus who had someone crucified in
his stead. Moreover, in the early years of the first millennium
there were many other saviours, many sons of gods who healed the
sick and cured the lame. But as Christianity spread, they were
pronounced unacceptable – even heretical – and they faded from
view. Now, in Heretic, Catherine Nixey tells their extraordinary
story, one of contingency, chance and plurality. It is a story
about what might have been.
Bold, faithful, challenging - this volume uncovers the social and
political implications of the gospel message by looking at
Anabaptist theology and practice from a female perspective. The
contributors approach the gospel from a wide range of disciplines
and backgrounds, liberating the radical political ethic of Jesus
Christ from patriarchal distortions and demonstrating that gender
justice and peace theology are inseparable. Beautifully illustrated
with pen drawings, Liberating the Politics of Jesus recognizes the
authority of women to interpret and reconstruct the peace church
tradition on issues such as subordination, suffering, atonement,
the nature of church, leadership, and discipleship. The
contributors confront difficult topics head-on, such as the power
structures in South Africa, armed conflict in Colombia, and the
sexual violence of John Howard Yoder. The result is a renewed
Anabaptist peace theology with the potential to transform the work
of theology and ministry in all Christian traditions.
The Maimonides Review of Philosophy and Religion is an annual
collection of double-blind peer-reviewed articles, which seeks to
provide a broad international arena for an intellectual exchange of
ideas between the disciplines of philosophy, theology, religion,
cultural history, and literature and to showcase their multifarious
junctures within the framework of Jewish studies.
Offering a decisive challenge to the older reception of Pusey as a
paragon of backwards scholarship, Tobias A. Karlowicz argues that
Pusey is properly understood as a penetrating and original
theologian whose work anticipated contemporary conversations about
the nature of theology, and a pivotal figure in the history of
Anglican theology. Karlowicz locates the heart of Pusey's project
in a theological perception which looks through the physicality and
concreteness of language, to discern Christ at the centre of both
Scripture and the physical creation. This 'sacramental vision,'
which grew from Pusey's critique of Christianity's decay and his
formative engagement with patristic hermeneutics and ontology,
forms his teaching on the sacraments as vehicles for a Christian
life of eucharistic self-oblation in union with Christ, and
demonstrates the relevance of his thought to contemporary theology.
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