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This book provides original and controversial contributions into
specific areas of Johannine studies, along with defenses of various
traditional theological interpretations of John that are commonly
overlooked in New Testament scholarship. Kirk R. MacGregor offers
new insights into the authorship of the Fourth Gospel, the content
of the underlying Signs Source, the meaning of the phrases "believe
in him" and "believe in his name," Jesus' claim that Abraham saw
his day, the significance of John 14.6, and why the resurrected
Jesus upbraided Thomas. MacGregor employs the doctrine of middle
knowledge to reconcile the seemingly paradoxical Johannine claims
of divine predestination, genuine human freedom, and the universal
divine salvific will. He defends the ontological equality but
functional subordination of the Johannine Jesus to God the Father
as well as the deity and personality of the Holy Spirit as
presented by the Gospel of John.
Paul Tillich and Religious Socialism: Towards a Kingdom of Peace
and Justice argues that the Kingdom of God-the reign of God over
all human affairs via God's manifestations in love, power, and
justice-can be fragmentarily achieved through a religious socialism
that creatively integrates the early Tillich's socialist thinking
with later insights throughout Tillich's theological career and
with contemporary developments in just peacemaking. The resulting
religious socialism is defined by economic justice and a
recognition of the sacred reality in all human endeavors. It
employs Christianity to furnish the necessary depth for warding off
materialism and affirming the spiritual dimension of both labor and
acquiring material goods. The unbridgeable Marxist chasm between
expectation and reality is bridged through new being, already
historically inaugurated in the Christhood of Jesus. New being is
fundamentally oriented toward bringing justice to the poor, the
disenfranchised, and the marginalized. It affirms the individual
and equal value of all persons and thus, in Kantian terms, promotes
a kingdom of intrinsically worthwhile ends rather than a kingdom of
instrumentally worthwhile means of things.
As the first systematic theology of its kind, the ecumenical
construction synthesizes the strengths of what are typically
considered two disparate branches of Christianity, namely, Roman
Catholicism and Anabaptism. Focusing on the celebrated Jesuit
neo-Scholastic theologian Luis de Molina (1535 1600) and the
evangelical peace communities from the early modern period onward,
this system integrates the best in Catholic philosophical theology
with the best historical implementations of the Free Church
ecclesiological tradition. In doing so, this progressive doctrinal
edifice furnishes provocative new answers to perennial quandaries.
Included in this discussion are the polarity between sovereign
predestination and libertarian freedom, the interaction between
omniscience and God's "changing his mind," and the existence of
gratuitous evil. This system breaks ground in the realm of
practical theology by proposing an antithetical relationship
between church discipline and the sacraments. While avoiding the
either-or debate between egalitarianism and complementarianism,
this theology demonstrates exegetically that women should not be
restricted from holding any leadership position within the church.
Drawing together these dialectical and Scriptural threads, this
book advocates a social ethic that exhorts Christians to display
extreme reluctance on matters of war, and to exercise discernment
toward political agendas by measuring them against the Sermon on
the Mount."
Challenging the widespread classification of evangelical theologian
Balthasar Hubmaier (1480-1528) as a Schleitheim-adhering
Anabaptist, this book argues that Hubmaier should instead be
understood as a bridge between the Radical and Magisterial branches
of the Reformation. Paramount among this book's new discoveries is
the overarching three-tiered structure of Hubmaier's theological
system, consisting of a libertarian anthropology, sacramental
theology, and ecclesiology. While recent studies have demonstrated
the favorable reception of Bernard of Clairvaux by Luther and
Calvin, this book reveals that Bernard also exerted a profound
impact upon Hubmaier's anthropology. Consequently, Hubmaier crafted
highly philosophically realist doctrines of believers' baptism and
the Eucharist as grace-imparting sacraments instead of ordinances
without salvific power. In Hubmaier's baptism, God not only
regenerated neophytes, but also predestined them to final
salvation. By partaking of the Eucharist, Hubmaier insisted that
believers themselves (not the bread and wine) were literally
consubstantiated with the physical body of Christ. Intertwining
church discipline with sacramental reception, Hubmaier devised a
strikingly progressive ecclesiology in which free churches were
administered by local governments. This book provides for a deeper
understanding of one of the 16th century's most creative and
sophisticated thinkers.
When Luis de Molina died in Madrid in 1600, he had every reason to
believe he was about to be anathametized by Pope Clement VIII. The
Protestant Reformation was splitting Europe, tribunals of the
Inquisition met regularly in a dozen Spanish cities, and the Pope
had launched a commission two years earlier to investigate Molina's
writings. Molina was eventually vindicated, though the decision
came seven years after his death. In the centuries that followed
Molina was relegated to relatively minor status in the history of
theology until a renaissance of interest in recent years. His
doctrine of God's "middle knowledge," in particular, has been
appropriated by a number of current philosophers and theologians,
with apologist William Lane Craig calling it "one of the most
fruitful theological ideas ever conceived." In Luis de Molina: The
Life and Theology of the Founder of Middle Knowledge, author Kirk
R. MacGregor outlines the main contours of Molina's subtle and
far-reaching philosophical theology, covering his views on God's
foreknowledge, salvation and predestination, poverty and obedience,
and social justice. Drawing on writings of Molina never translated
into English, MacGregor also provides insight into the experiences
that shaped Molina, recounting the events of a life fully as
dramatic as any of the Protestant Reformers. With implications for
topics as wide-ranging as biblical inerrancy, creation and
evolution, the relationship between Christianity and world
religions, the problem of evil, and quantum indeterminacy, Molina's
thought remains as fresh and relevant as ever. Most significantly,
perhaps, it continues to offer the possibility of a rapprochement
between Calvinism and Arminianism, a view of salvation that fully
upholds both God's predestination and human free will. As the first
full-length work ever published on Molina, Kirk MacGregor's Luis de
Molina provides an accessible and insightful introduction for
scholars, students, and armchair theologians alike.
This book provides original and controversial contributions into
specific areas of Johannine studies, along with defenses of various
traditional theological interpretations of John that are commonly
overlooked in New Testament scholarship. Kirk R. MacGregor offers
new insights into the authorship of the Fourth Gospel, the content
of the underlying Signs Source, the meaning of the phrases "believe
in him" and "believe in his name," Jesus' claim that Abraham saw
his day, the significance of John 14.6, and why the resurrected
Jesus upbraided Thomas. MacGregor employs the doctrine of middle
knowledge to reconcile the seemingly paradoxical Johannine claims
of divine predestination, genuine human freedom, and the universal
divine salvific will. He defends the ontological equality but
functional subordination of the Johannine Jesus to God the Father
as well as the deity and personality of the Holy Spirit as
presented by the Gospel of John.
Accessible and comprehensive, Contemporary Theology: An
Introduction by professor and author Kirk R. MacGregor provides a
chronological survey of the major thinkers and schools of thought
in modern theology in a manner that is both approachable and
intriguing. Unique among introductions to contemporary theology,
MacGregor includes: Evangelical perspectives alongside mainline and
liberal developments The influence of philosophy and the recent
Christian philosophical renaissance on theology Global
contributions Recent developments in exegetical theology The
implications of theological shifts on ethics and church life
Contemporary Theology: An Introduction is noteworthy for making
complex thought understandable and for tracing the landscape of
modern theology in a well-organized and easy-to-follow manner.
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