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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Aspects of religions (non-Christian) > Theology
Seeing is an act of relating. Being in relation, according to much
of feminist theology, can be an ethical activity. This book is
based on the assumption that seeing can be an ethical way of
relating to the other. Through looking, on the one hand, at films
that describe women artists who see another person, and, on the
other, at feminist theology, this book puts forward an original
view of the act of seeing as a gesture of respect for and belief in
another person's visible and invisible sides, which guarantees the
safekeeping of the other's memory.
Sinceits founding by Jacques Waardenburg in 1971, Religion and
Reason has been a leading forum for contributions on theories,
theoretical issues and agendas related to the phenomenon and the
study of religion. Topics include (among others) category
formation, comparison, ethnophilosophy, hermeneutics, methodology,
myth, phenomenology, philosophy of science, scientific atheism,
structuralism, and theories of religion. From time to time the
series publishes volumes that map the state of the art and the
history of the discipline.
In our post-Christian, pluralistic society, responding to the
perception that Christians are prejudiced, anti-intellectual, and
bigoted has become a greater challenge than ever before. The result
is often intimidation, withdrawal, and even doubts among God's
people about what we really believe. Bestselling author and
teaching pastor at Living on the Edge, Chip Ingram, wants to change
that. In Why I Believe, he gives compelling answers to questions
about - the resurrection of Christ - the evidence of an afterlife
-the accuracy and intellectual feasibility of the Bible - the
debate between creation and evolution - the historicity of Jesus -
and more The solid, biblical, logical answers he shares will
satisfy the honest doubts that every believer experiences now and
then, and will provide practical, thoughtful answers that can be
shared with family and friends. This is the perfect resource for
churches, small groups, and individuals who long not only to really
know what and why they believe, but also to be equipped to explain
the intellectual justification for their faith in everyday
language.
2013 Word Guild Award (Biblical Studies) A recognized expert in New
Testament Greek offers a historical understanding of the writing,
transmission, and translation of the New Testament and provides
cutting-edge insights into how we got the New Testament in its
ancient Greek and modern English forms. In part responding to those
who question the New Testament's reliability, Stanley Porter
rigorously defends the traditional goals of textual criticism: to
establish the original text. He reveals fascinating details about
the earliest New Testament manuscripts and shows that the textual
evidence supports an early date for the New Testament's formation.
He also explores the vital role translation plays in biblical
understanding and evaluates various translation theories. The book
offers a student-level summary of a vast amount of historical and
textual information.
This is the first volume of Robert Cumming Neville's magnum opus,
Theology as Symbolic Engagement. Neville is the premier American
systematic theologian of our time. His work is profoundly
influenced by Paul Tillich, Friedrich Schleiermacher, and the
American pragmatists John Dewey and Charles Sanders Pierce. From
Tillich he takes the notion of religion, art, and morality as
symbol, and the notion that religion is the substance of culture
and culture the form of religion. Thus, theology is symbolic
engagement with cultural forms, and Neville explores the ways that
such engagement occurs among various religious traditions. One of
the most important tasks in theology is to devise ways of testing,
correcting, or affirming claims that we had been unable to question
before. This book will argue that "system" in theology is not
merely correlating assertions, but rather building perspectives
from which we can render the various parts of theology vulnerable
for assessment. In fact, one of the unique features of this book is
its engagement with other religions. Such dialogue has been a
feature of Neville's work from the beginning. Theology as Symbolic
Engagement breaks the boundaries of systematic theology and moves
away from the static character that characterizes such enterprises
from Barth onward. Instead, Neville's book showcases the dynamic
character of all theology. The hallmark of this entire project is
its effort to show theology to be hypothetical and to make it
vulnerable to correction.
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Dusty Earthlings
(Hardcover)
John Mustol; Foreword by Nancey C. Murphy
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R1,391
R1,155
Discovery Miles 11 550
Save R236 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This book offers a new understanding of sacrifice as a response to
love and an entering into the self-giving life of God.Most ideas of
sacrifice, even specifically Christian ideas, as we saw in the
Reformation controversies, have something to do with deprivation or
destruction. But this is not authentic Christian sacrifice.
Authentic Christian sacrifice, and ultimately all true sacrifice
(whether one is conscious of it or not) begins with the
self-offering of the Father in the gift-sending of the Son,
continues with the loving "response" of the Son, in his humanity,
and in the Spirit, to the Father and for us, and finally, begins to
become real in our world when human beings, in the power of the
same Spirit that was in Jesus, respond to love with love, and thus
begin to enter into that perfectly loving, totally self-giving
relationship that is the life of the triune God.The origins of this
are in the Hebrew Bible, its revelatory high-points in Jesus and
Paul, and its working out in the life of the Church, especially its
"Eucharistic Prayers". Special attention will be paid to the
atonement, not just because atonement and sacrifice are often
synonymous, but also because traditional atonement theology is the
source of distortions that continue to plague Christian thinking
about sacrifice.After exploring the possibility of finding a
phenomenology of sacrificial atonement in Girardian mimetic theory,
the book will end with some suggestions on how to communicate its
findings to people likely to be put off from the outset by the
negative connotations associated with 'sacrifice'.
The Reign of God constitutes the first detailed and systematic
critical engagement with Oliver O’Donovan’s political theology.
It argues that O’Donovan’s theological account of political
authority is not tenable on the basis of exegetical and
methodological problems. The book goes on to demonstrate a way to
refine O’Donovan’s theology of political authority by
incorporating insights from his earlier work in moral theology.
This can provide a cogent basis for thinking that the Christ-event
redeems the natural political authority embedded in the created
order and inaugurates its new historical bene esse in the form of
Christian liberalism.
Can religions be compared? For decades the discipline of religious
studies was based on the assumption that they can. Postmodern and
postcolonial reflections, however, raised significant doubts. In
social and cultural studies the investigation of the particular
often took precedence over a comparative perspective.
Interreligious Comparisons in Religious Studies and Theology
questions whether religious studies can survive if it ceases to be
comparative religion. Can it do justice to a globalized world if it
is limited on the specific and turns a blind eye on the general?
While comparative approaches have come under strong pressure in
religious studies, they have started flourishing in Theology.
Comparative theology practices interfaith dialogue by means of
comparative research. This volume asks whether theology and
religious studies are able to mutually benefit from their critical
and constructive reflections. Can postcolonial criticism of
neutrality and objectivity in religious studies create new links
with the decidedly perspectival approach of comparative theology?
In this collection scholars from theology and religious studies
discuss the methodology of interreligious comparison in the light
of recent doubts and current objections. Together with the
contributors, Perry Schmidt-Leukel and Andreas Nehring argue that
after decades of critique, interreligious comparison deserves to be
reconsidered, reconstructed and reintroduced.
Sectarianism in Qumran: A Cross-Cultural Perspective explores the
sectarian characteristics of the system of beliefs and laws of the
two major Qumran sects of the Dead Sea Scrolls, the yahad and the
Damascus Covenant, using theories of sectarianism and related
topics in sociology, anthropology and the study of religion. It
discusses Qumranic moral and purity boundaries, cultic rituals,
wealth, gender, atonement, revelation mysticism, structure and
organization and compares them with those of seven sects of the
same (introversionist) type: the early Anabaptists, Mennonites,
Hutterites and Amish, Puritans, Quakers and Shakers. The
sociological and historical relationship between the Qumran sects
and the related movements of 1 Enoch, Jubilees and the Essenes are
analyzed in detail, in order to understand the socio-religious
background of sectarianism in Qumran and its subsequent variations.
Throughout the chapters, differences between the yahad, the
Damascus Covenant and the Essenes are observed in relation to
social boundaries, social structure, gender relations, revelation
and inclination towards mysticism. Points of resemblance and
difference are traced between the Qumran sects and the early-modern
Christian ones, and several different patterns of sectarian
ideology and behaviour are noticed among all these sects.
The Tractate Ketubot ("marriage contracts") discusses inter alia
the sum specified at the time of marriage to be paid in the event
of divorce or the husband's death, together with the mutual
obligations of man and wife, the wife's property, the law of
inheritance in the female line and the widow's rights. The Tractate
Nidda ("Female impurity") regulates conduct during menstruation
(cf. Lev 15:19ff) and after birth (Lev 12); further topics are
women's life stages, puberty and various medical questions.
John Locke's 1695 enquiry into the foundations of Christian belief is here presented for the first time in a critical edition. Locke maintains that the essentials of the faith, few and simple, can be found by anyone for themselves in the Scripture, and that this provides a basis for tolerant agreeement among Christians. An authoritative text is accompanied by abundant information conducive to an understanding of Locke's religious thought.
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The Comfort of God
(Hardcover)
Harold John Ockenga; Foreword by Garth M. Rosell
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R1,388
R1,146
Discovery Miles 11 460
Save R242 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Feuerbachs "Theogonie" ist die Frucht sechsjahriger Studien, die er
im Anschluss an die 1848/49 in Heidelberg gehaltenen "Vorlesungen
uber das Wesen der Religion" begonnen hatte. Die Schrift vollendet
seine philosophisch-anthropologische Theorie vom Wesen der
Religion. Seine Religionsanalyse gelangt hier, unter philologisch
meisterhafter Benutzung literarischer Zeugnisse des Altertums, zur
Theorie des "theogonischen Wunsches": Die Vorstellungswelt der
Religion wird als phantastische gedankliche Schopfung blossen
menschlichen Wunschdenkens verstanden, das aus schmerzlich
empfundener menschlicher Ohnmacht und Bedurftigkeit im irdischen
Dasein entspringt. Damit wird die Religion, gleich welcher
Erscheinungsform, ihrem Ursprunge nach als allusionarer Akt der
Wunscherfullung begriffen; ihr wird ein ausschliesslich
subjektiv-menschlicher Ursprung zuerkannt."
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