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This volume of the Building Bridges Seminar, Power: Divine and
Human, Christian and Muslim Perspectives, comprises pairs of essays
by Christians and Muslims which introduce texts for dialogical
study, plus the actual text-excerpts themselves. This new book goes
far beyond mere reporting on a dialogical seminar; rather, it
provides guidance and materials for constructing a similar
dialogical experience on a particular topic. As a resource for
comparative theology, Power: Divine and Human is unique in that it
takes up a topic not usually explored in depth in Christian-Muslim
conversations. It is written by scholars for scholars. However, in
tone and structure, it is suitable for the non-specialist as well.
Students (undergraduate and graduate), religious leaders, and
motivated non-specialists will find it readable and useful. While
it falls solidly in the domain of comparative theology, it can also
be used in courses on dialogical reading of scripture,
interreligious relations, and political philosophy.
This volume of the Building Bridges Seminar, Power: Divine and
Human, Christian and Muslim Perspectives, comprises pairs of essays
by Christians and Muslims which introduce texts for dialogical
study, plus the actual text-excerpts themselves. This new book goes
far beyond mere reporting on a dialogical seminar; rather, it
provides guidance and materials for constructing a similar
dialogical experience on a particular topic. As a resource for
comparative theology, Power: Divine and Human is unique in that it
takes up a topic not usually explored in depth in Christian-Muslim
conversations. It is written by scholars for scholars. However, in
tone and structure, it is suitable for the non-specialist as well.
Students (undergraduate and graduate), religious leaders, and
motivated non-specialists will find it readable and useful. While
it falls solidly in the domain of comparative theology, it can also
be used in courses on dialogical reading of scripture,
interreligious relations, and political philosophy.
Tracing a theoretical course from William of Ockham to Richard
Hooker, this work examines the thinking of the English Reformers on
the origin and nature of law and authority for both church and
commonwealth. O'Donovan places the political and legal thought of
the Reformers in the broader context of the Reformation and its
theological debates over the relationship between faith and works
and between Scripture and tradition.
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