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"The Spirit of God examines the use of 1 and 2 Corinthians by two
fourth-century Greek Christian authors, Athanasius and Basil of
Caesarea, especially as it relates to the doctrine of the Holy
Spirit.
The controversy over the nature and status of the Spirit during the
latter half of the fourth century is detailed in order to place in
context the examination of the way in which the theological
concerns of Athanasius and Basil shaped their pneumatological
interpretation of the Corinthian correspondence.
This examination will be of value to patristic scholars interested
in the way that Scripture was employed in the fourth century to
hammer out doctrine.
The ESV Church History Study Bible is designed to help believers in
all seasons of life understand the Bible-featuring 20,000 study
notes from church history's most prominent figures.
'Waiting on the Spirit of Promise' is a study of the life and
ministry of Abraham Cheare (1626-1668), containing selections from
Cheare's works, and rescuing an important seventeenth-century
English Baptist from obscurity. Cheare has been overshadowed by
other more celebrated Baptist contemporaries, but as the pastor of
the Particular Baptist work in Plymouth, Devon, Cheare played a key
role in the advance of the Baptist cause in the West Country in the
1650s. His 'Sighs for Sion' is an excellent illustration of early
Baptist piety. With the Restoration of the monarchy in 1660,
Cheare, like many other Dissenters, suffered arrest for his refusal
to give up preaching. Cheare's prison writings reveal both a sturdy
faith in God and a deep-seated piety. Despite the fact that he was
incarcerated in a series of "nasty prisons", Cheare used this time
of suffering to deepen his walk with God and so provide a model for
his congregation of Christian integrity and joy in the midst of
trial. To the very end of his life, Cheare eagerly awaited further
outpourings of the Spirit of Promise upon the Church and looked
forward to that day when his Lord Jesus would make all things
right.
While Baptists through the years have been certain that "war is
hell", they have not always been able to agree on how to respond to
it. This book traces much of this troubled relationship from the
days of Baptist origins with close ties to pacifist Anabaptists to
the responses of Baptists in America to the Vietnam War. Essays
also include discussions of the English Baptist Andrew Fuller's
response to the threat of Napoleon, how Baptists in America dealt
with the War of 1812, the support of Canadian Baptists for
Britain's war in Sudan and Abyssinia in the 1880s, the decisive
effect of the First World War on Canada's T.T. Shields, the
response of Australian Baptists to the Second World War, and how
Russian Baptists dealt with the Cold War. These chapters provide
important analyses of Baptist reactions to various manifestations
of one of society's most intractable problems.
Best-selling author John Piper puts the life of Andrew Fuller on
display as inspriration for all Christians to devote themselves to
knowing, guarding, and spreading the true gospel-to the ends of the
earth.
The ESV Church History Study Bible is designed to help believers in
all seasons of life understand the Bible-featuring 20,000 study
notes from church history's most prominent figures.
The aim of Odgaard Mollers book is threefold: The first main
section seeks to clarify how and why Jesus is presented in the
pre-1968 writings of the Danish theologian and philosopher K.E.
Logstrup (1905-1981). Throughout his work, Logstrups main focus has
been a rehabilitation of the insight that life is something
definite, because it is created. Here, Jesus primarily plays a
methodological/strategic role as the one confirming and giving
witness to Logstrups interpretation of created life in a given time
of his authorship. When faith in creation is formulated polemically
against another interpretation of life, Jesus serves as Logstrups
ally in this discussion. In the second main section, this
examination is extrapolated to include a discussion with Bultmann
and two of his students in order to clarify the character of his
Christology, not least whether -- or in what way -- this can be
characterised as implicit Christology. Finally, in the light of
Ricoeurs hermeneutic philosophy of religion, the third main section
considers the systematic-theological validity of this picture of
Jesus. The overall conclusion can be summed up in this way: The
main line in Logstrups work goes from created life to the human
being Jesus of Nazareth. Jesus incarnates created life; therefore
he is the true human being. This close connection between (created)
Life and (true) Human Being is the kernel in Logstrups thought.
This makes his perception of Jesus and his Christology distinctive,
original and specifically Logstrupian.
B. B. Warfield is well known as one of America's leading
theologians, perhaps second only to Jonathan Edwards. But until now
the character of his own Christian experience and his understanding
of the Christian life have remained unexplored. Fred Zaspel unpacks
these for us here, and what we find is that Warfield's profound
theological mind is matched only by his passionate heart for
Christ. From Warfield we learn truly what it is to live in light of
the gospel.
Calvinist missionaries.
If you think that sounds like an oxymoron, you're not alone. Yet
a close look at John Calvin's life, writings, and successors
reveals a passion for the spread of the gospel and the salvation of
sinners.
From training pastors at his Genevan Academy to sending
missionaries to the jungles of Brazil, Calvin consistently sought
to encourage and equip Christians to take the good news of
salvation to the very ends of the earth. In this carefully
researched book, Michael Haykin and Jeffrey Robinson clear away
longstanding stereotypes related to the Reformed tradition and
Calvin's theological heirs, highlighting the Reformer's neglected
missional vision and legacy.
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Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
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R367
R345
Discovery Miles 3 450
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