This second volume of the 1951-2 Gifford Lectures on Natural
Religion and Christian Theology completes Canon Raven's version of
a modern Religio Medici. If the Cartesian dualism of body and mind
is challenged successfully by an integrative or holistic
philosophy, the theological statements are also required, to
express the Christian's interpretation of his experience. In this
second set of lectures Canon Raven examines critically and
constructively the scope and character of this restatement and
interpretation. He claims that any adequate interpretation must be
stated in fully personal categories; that the confession of Jesus
as the image of the invisible can still be accepted, provided it be
recognised that this involves a more radical restatement of the
nature of God and of the quality of human solidarity than has been
accepted by tradition; and that on these conditions it is still
possible for man to 'live eternally'.
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