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Boundless Love (Hardcover)
Andrew Ray Williams; Foreword by Daniel Castelo
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R846
R695
Discovery Miles 6 950
Save R151 (18%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This guide aims to elaborate and constructively engage some of the
ongoing dogmatic challenges within the field of Christian
pneumatology. Rather than a strict survey, the book largely
represents a collection of working proposals on a number of
relevant themes, including cosmology, mediation, the nature and
role of Spirit-baptism, and discernment. For those who have found
pneumatology frustrating and confusing, the book can serve as an
aid to clarify some of the most crucial matters at stake in the
doctrine of the Holy Spirit and in turn provide some ways forward
amidst the morass of possibilities available.
This volume written by a theologian and a biblical scholar offers a
fresh model for understanding Scripture as God's Word. The authors
work out the four Nicene marks of the church--one, holy, catholic,
and apostolic--as marks of Scripture, offering a new way of
thinking about the Bible that bridges theology and interpretation.
Their ecclesial analogy invites us to think of Scripture in similar
terms to how we think of the church, countering the incarnational
model propagated by Peter Enns and others.
In this book, established scholars from different religions,
regions, and disciplines continue the dialogue that Veli-Matti
Karkkainen began in his A Constructive Christian Theology for the
Pluralistic World series and respond to his work in light of their
diverse expertise and context. Each of the three parts focuses on a
key area of Karkkainen's engaging work: 1) highlighting how his
method shaped each volume, 2) highlighting his commitment to global
perspectives, and 3) highlighting his interreligious and
interdisciplinary dialogue partners. Together, these essays seek to
deepen and extend the impact of Karkkainen's work, taking it
seriously as a substantive model for contemporary systematic
theology in listening and engaging with this world.
This handbook provides an interdisciplinary and diverse reference
work to the Holy Spirit. Daniel Castelo and Kenneth M. Loyer
gathered together a wide range of voices that are religiously,
geographically, and ethnically diverse, bringing theology into
conversation with biblical studies, ethics and morality, and global
Christian studies. The T&T Clark Handbook of Pneumatology
examines the Holy Spirit in a variety of sources, such as the
Synoptic Gospels, the Catholic Epistles, the Old Testament, and the
Hebrew Scriptures. It also includes chapters on key concepts in the
field, such as mediation and sacramentality, ecology, and creation.
This broad scope enables readers to appreciate how nuanced the
field of Pneumatology is, and how it can be relevant for other
Christian discourses.
In what may be regarded as his magnum opus, Clark Pinnock explores
the vital Christian doctrine of the Holy Spirit. Writing out of
wide learning and deep personal passion, he points the way to
restoring the oft-neglected Spirit to centrality in the life and
witness of the church. Pinnock's book is both catholic-respecting
the beliefs and worship of the historic church-and
evangelical-drawing particularly on the heritage of the
Reformation. Always in sight is the mission of the church, because
"people want to meet the real and living God and will not be
satisfied with a religion that only preaches and moralizes." For
this second edition, theologian Daniel Castelo draws from his
experience using Flame of Love in the classroom to add notes with
helpful commentary and brief reflections on each chapter's main
themes and contributions. While the classic text is preserved, the
book becomes even more accessible to contemporary readers.
This work seeks to create a via media between the tradition of
divine impassibility and the contemporary preference for divine
possibility within formal theological reflection. Rather than
dismissing divine impassibility as a Hellenized and antiquated
notion, the author seeks to reconfigure how this axiom functioned
for the early church as a way to complement and deepen the present
tendency toward divine possibility. At stake in these discussions
is not only the coherence of God-talk across time but also what
Christians take to be their guiding vision of God's character and
action in the world, a vision that inevitably determines the shape
of Christian discipleship.
This handbook provides an interdisciplinary and diverse reference
work to the Holy Spirit. Daniel Castelo and Kenneth M. Loyer
gathered together a wide range of voices that are religiously,
geographically, and ethnically diverse, bringing theology into
conversation with biblical studies, ethics and morality, and global
Christian studies. The T&T Clark Handbook of Pneumatology
examines the Holy Spirit in a variety of sources, such as the
Synoptic Gospels, the Catholic Epistles, the Old Testament, and the
Hebrew Scriptures. It also includes chapters on key concepts in the
field, such as mediation and sacramentality, ecology, and creation.
This broad scope enables readers to appreciate how nuanced the
field of Pneumatology is, and how it can be relevant for other
Christian discourses.
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Boundless Love (Paperback)
Andrew Ray Williams; Foreword by Daniel Castelo
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R491
R404
Discovery Miles 4 040
Save R87 (18%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Synopsis: The question of God's relationship to evil is a
long-running one in the history of Christianity, and the term often
deployed for this task has been theodicy. The way theodicy has
historically been pursued, however, has been problematic on a
number of counts. Most significantly, these efforts have generally
been insufficiently theological. This work hopes to subvert and
reconfigure the theodical task in a way that can be accessible to
nonspecialists. Overall, the book hopes to cast the "god" of
theodicy as the triune God of Christian confession, a move that
shapes and alters distinctly all that follows in what has
traditionally been considered a philosophical matter. Endorsements:
"If we are to speak with theological intelligence and Christian
compassion about the nature, causes, and overcoming of evil, we
must first speak of the God whom Christians confess and in whom
they hope. This elegant, perceptive, and gentle book shows us why
theology matters in theodicy." --John Webster, FRSE, King's College
"This book addresses a timely, critically urgent, and complex
topic. Daniel Castelo engages it with grace, humility, and deep
understanding. Many books on theodicy read with philosophical
detachment. Castelo writes as a Christian theologian fully
committed to practicing discipleship. The questions he faces are no
mere abstractions, but the stuff of life. Castelo knows exactly
when to speak with bold clarity and when to remain reverently
silent. Anyone who reads this book will do so with great profit."
--Stephen Rankin, Southern Methodist University "Theological
Theodicy is a richly textured and accessible exception to the rule
of failed theodicies. Informed by the Catholic spiritual-doctrinal
tradition and fired by Pentecostal sensibilities, Castelo faces
troubling questions and refuses all premature resolutions. With
humility and verve, he calls for spirited, virtuous embodiment of
the gospel as counter-witness to the evils of this present age."
--Chris Green, Pentecostal Theological Seminary "Daniel Castelo
guides readers through a thoughtful and insightful exploration of
the problem of suffering. Castelo's approach honors the mystery of
God, who cannot be fully explained and is thus inherently
apophatic. His fundamental understanding of evil is a scandalous
'sickness or malady, ' a condition of anti-godness. With theodicy
being perhaps the most pressing issue today--not just in seminary
classrooms, but in the world that feels godforsaken--Castelo's work
offers a hopeful and therapeutic vision." --Elaine A. Heath,
Southern Methodist University Author Biography: Daniel Castelo is
Associate Professor of Theology at Seattle Pacific University in
Seattle, WA. He is the author of The Apathetic God (2009).
Robert Wall began his teaching career at Seattle Pacific University
in 1978. Now, forty years later and in celebration of his
seventieth birthday, colleagues and former students have gathered
to produce this volume in honor of their friend and teacher. The
results are sure to delight all of those who have studied under or
been friends of Professor Wall. The essays are grouped under two
general themes: theology and methodology (with an emphasis on
Wesleyan biblical hermeneutics, canonical perspectives, and the
implications of these approaches for church life and work) and
biblical texts/themes, especially with a view to the relationship
of the study of Scripture to the life of the Christian. In both of
these areas, the contributions bear in mind Wall’s conviction
that academic study and spiritual life need not—in fact, should
not—be kept apart. The contributors to this volume include Frank
Anthony Spina, Andrew Knapp, Shannon Nicole Smythe, Daniel Castelo,
Anthony B. Robinson, Eugene E. Lemcio, Sara M. Koenig, Jack
Levison, Laura C. S. Holmes, John Painter, and Stephen E. Fowl.
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Hosea (Paperback)
Bo H. Lim, Daniel Castelo
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R680
R571
Discovery Miles 5 710
Save R109 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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In this commentary Bo Lim, an Old Testament scholar, and Daniel
Castelo, a theologian, come together to help the church recover and
read the prophetic book of Hosea in a way that is both faithful to
its message and relevant to our contemporary context. Though Hosea
is rich with imagery and metaphor that can be difficult to
interpret, Lim and Castelo show that with its focus on corporate
and structural sin it contains an important message for today's
church. Critically engaging the ancient biblical text, Lim provides
a running commentary on Hosea, which is interspersed throughout
with illuminating theological essays by Castelo. The only way to
answer satisfactorily the difficult questions posed by the book of
Hosea, Lim and Castelo say, is through a theological interpretation
of the book. Their interdisciplinary work offers a constructive
model for how the church might faithfully read and proclaim the
message of Hosea today.
Informed reassessment of Pentecostalism as a mystical tradition of
the church universal Pentecostalism, says Daniel Castelo, is
commonly framed as "evangelicalism with tongues" or dismissed as
simply a revivalist movement. In this book Castelo argues that
Pentecostalism is actually best understood as a Christian mystical
tradition. Taking a theological approach to Pentecostalism, Castelo
looks particularly at the movement's methodology and epistemology
as he carefully distinguishes it from American evangelicalism.
Castelo displays the continuity between Pentecostalism and ancient
church tradition, creating a unified narrative of Pentecostalism
and the mystical tradition of Christianity throughout history and
today. Finally, he uses a test case to press the question of what
the interactions between mystical theology and dogmatics could look
like.
This guide aims to elaborate and constructively engage some of the
ongoing dogmatic challenges within the field of Christian
pneumatology. Rather than a strict survey, the book largely
represents a collection of working proposals on a number of
relevant themes, including cosmology, mediation, the nature and
role of Spirit-baptism, and discernment. For those who have found
pneumatology frustrating and confusing, the book can serve as an
aid to clarify some of the most crucial matters at stake in the
doctrine of the Holy Spirit and in turn provide some ways forward
amidst the morass of possibilities available.
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