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Come, Lord Jesus invites readers to enter more deeply into the
mystery and wonder of the Incarnation of Christ. For each day from
the first Sunday of Advent to the Feast of the Epiphany, readings,
prayers, and suggestions for daily devotions help readers interact
imaginatively with the reactions and feelings of the biblical
figures involved with the story of Jesus' birth. Rowell and
Chilcott-Monk focus particularly on Mary, her "yes" to God at the
Annunciation, and her own journey from Bethlehem to Calvary. The
title of the book is a translation of a New Testament prayer,
Maranatha , an expression of the longing, hope, and unity of
purpose among the first followers of Christ. At a time of year when
commercial pressures threaten to obscure the child in the manger,
Come, Lord Jesus will focus hearts and minds afresh on the miracle
of love at work among us.
There is an immensely rich tradition of writing from the Anglican tradition that has helped to form the spirituality and theology of the contemporary church. This major new work draws together the writings of most of the major writers from the sixteenth century to the present day who have contributed to this development. Each writer is introduced briefly, and then extracts from major works are reproduced, with clear guides to the source texts from which the material has been drawn.
Oxford Scholarly Classics is a new series that makes available
again great academic works from the archives of Oxford University
Press. Reissued in uniform series design, the reissues will enable
libraries, scholars, and students to gain fresh access to some of
the finest scholarship of the last century.
1983 marked the 150th anniversary of John Keble's Assize Sermon, a
sermon which Newman recognized as the beginning of the Oxford
Movement. The religious revival which it signalled, though
originating in a particular political challenge to the Church of
England, was far-reaching in its effect. The continuity and
catholic identity of Anglicanism was powerfully affirmed;
sacramental worship was restored to a central place in Anglican
devotion; religious orders were revived; and both in the mission
field and in the slums, devoted priests laboured with new vigour
and a new sense of the Church. This study of some of the major
themes and personalities of the Catholic revival in Anglicanism
highlights some of these aspects, and in particular, points to the
close relationship between theology and sacramental spirituality
which was at the heart of the movement. To recognize this central
characteristic of the revival can contribute much, the author
believes, to the renewal of the Catholic tradition in Anglicanism
today.
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Glory Descending (Paperback)
Douglas Dales, John Habgood, Geoffrey Rowell
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R844
R699
Discovery Miles 6 990
Save R145 (17%)
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The essays in this volume were written when John Henry Newman
was a Fellow of Oriel College, Oxford. He wrote the first, on
biblical miracles "The Miracles of Scripture," in 1825-26, as a
relatively young man; the other, "The Miracles of Early
Ecclesiastical History," was written in 1842-43. A comparison of
the two essays displays a shift in Newman's theological
stances.
In the earlier essay, Newman argues in accordance with the
theology of evidence of his time, maintaining that the age of
miracles was limited to those recorded in the Old Testament
scriptures and in the Gospels and Acts. He asserts that biblical
miracles served to demonstrate the divine inspiration of biblical
revelation and to attest to the divinity of Christ. However, with
the end of the apostolic age, the age of miracles came to an end;
miracles reported from the early ages of the Church Newman
dismissed as suspicious and possibly fraudulent. With this view,
Newman entered into an ongoing debate between the skepticism of
Hume and Paine and its continuation in the utilitarianism of
Bentham, on the one hand, and the views of Christian apologists
rebutting Hume's arguments, on the other.
In "The Miracles of Early Ecclesiastical History," Newman can be
seen as coming closer to accepting the doctrines of the Catholic
Church. He rejects the stance he took in "The Miracles of
Scripture," now arguing for a continuity of sacred history between
the biblical and ecclesiastical periods. He had clearly abandoned
the position of "evidence theologians" that miracles ended after
the time of the Apostles. Newman's movement between the writing of
the two essays is essentially a growing into a deeper awareness of
the Church as a divine society in whose life miracles and
supernatural gifts were to be expected.
This important new collection of essays on a topic of vital
importance is by a group of scholars from ten countries, from a
wide range of Christian traditions, East and West, and from various
academic disciplines.
What has happened to sacramentality in an age which is on the one
hand visual and on the other culturally cast adrift from the
traditional symbolic universe in which sacramental theology was
naturally at home? This book is not just confined to a discussion
of Eucharistic theology. It examines both the historical roots of
sacramentality, the concept of a sacral person, ways in which
sacramentality may be re-envisioned and the flourishing roday of
churches of a largely non-sacramental style in an age which is
increasingly visual rather than verbal.
The vital importance of the subject of this book is confirmed by
the distinction of the contributors--David Brown (Professor of
Theology at Durham University), Timothy Jenkins (Cambridge), Bishop
Geoffrey Rowell (Oxford), Jeremy Begbie (St. Andrews and
Cambridge), Ann Loades (Durham), David N. Power (Catholic
University of America), Sven-Erik Brodd (Uppsala), Peter Bouteneff
(St. Vladimir's Seminary, New York) and Susan A. Ross (Loyola
University, Chicago).
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