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After offering a brief overview of the role of faith within
Judaism, Christianity and Islam, an interdisciplinary analysis of
faith, belief, belief systems and the act of believing is
undertaken. The debate over the nature of doctrine between George
Lindbeck and Alister McGrath brings into focus four ways in which
beliefs can be employed: expressive, interpretative, formative and
referential/relational. An analysis of monotheistic belief ensues
which demonstrates how it can function meaningfully in each of
these modes, including the last, where insights from phenomenology
and relational ontology, as well as philosophical theology, favour
a participatory approach in which God is encountered not as an
object of investigation, but as that transcendent Other whose
worship is the fulfilment of human being. The study concludes by
highlighting convergences between the nature of faith presented in
the initial scriptural overview and that developed throughout the
rest of the study.
We are used to the idea of people believing in Christ, but did the
early church consider that Jesus also had faith in God? This book
evaluates the evidence, starting with a survey of the meaning of
faith in Judaism and Graeco-Roman literature and proceeding to a
detailed exegesis of the relevant New Testament material from the
synoptic Gospels, the Pauline and Deutero-Pauline Epistles, Hebrews
and Revelation. Two trajectories of interest in Jesus's faith are
identified: the paradigmatic, concerned with matters of
discipleship, and the theological, relating Christ to God's gift of
salvation. The examination is then broadened to trace the progress
of these trajectories through the literature of the first four
Christian centuries and concludes by identifying the Arian
controversy as the christological development which rendered
reference to Jesus' faith untenable.
We are used to the idea of people believing in Christ, but did the early church consider that Jesus also had faith in God? This book examines the meaning of faith in Judaism and Graeco-Roman literature, identifies two main trajectories of interest in the question of Jesus' faith, and traces the progress of these trajectories through the literature of the first four Christian centuries, up to the point where the interpretation of Jesus as a man of faith eventually proved incompatible with the orthodoxy of Nicene Christianity.
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