|
Showing 1 - 25 of
39 matches in All Departments
This title presents distinguished scholars on Calvin and his
surprising up to date relevance addressing three central current
issues: faith - ecumenism - public responsibility. This inspiring
collection of essays spells out the relevance of John Calvin's
theology for today in three areas: Faith? Calvin's theology asks
how God deals with the persistent presence of human sin. For
Calvin, the chief end of life is to know God and devote our life to
his glory. The still topical point is that we are freed from our
fixation with ourselves, thereby recognising and living out our
true reality in relation to God. Ecumenism? The unity of the Church
in Christ is of central importance to Calvin. We must do our utmost
to make it visible. In Calvin's view, if there is agreement in the
understanding of God and grace, all other differences have no
divisive importance. This still characterises Reformed
understanding today. Public responsibility? Calvin posed the
question about the church's public responsibility as no other
Reformer did. Part 3 reveals the sources of the worldwide impact of
Calvin's and Reformed theology on politics, the law, scholarship
and the organising of life in society, including civil society.
In this collection, six leading theologians on political theology
explore the contemporary states and potential future of the
discipline. Offering a highly nuanced and complex picture of
"older" and "newer" Political Theology, these scholars examine the
multifaceted interconnections and tensions between political
theologies, liberation theologies, feminist theologies, and
theologies that see themselves as "postcolonial" or "decolonizing."
Among other topics, the authors address the ecumenical and
global nature of political theology; the lack of critical feminist
analysis in most political, liberation, and postcolonial
theologies; the statements regarding political theology in the
encyclicals of Benedict XVI; and the specific tasks that political
theology must address to remain effective and relevant.
Contributors include Jurgen Moltmann, Johann Baptist Metz,
Elisabeth Schussler Fiorenza, Francis Schussler Fiorenza, Klaus
Tanner, and Michael Welker."
Clashes of Knowledge is the first volume of a series called
Knowledge and Space dealing with spatial disparities of knowledge
and the impact of the spatial context on the production and
application of knowledge. The contributions in this book explore
the conflicts between various types of knowledge, especially
between orthodox and heterodox knowledge systems, which range from
religious fundamentalism to heresies within the scientific
community itself. Does the traditional distinction between belief
and knowledge still make sense? How is the difference between
knowledge and belief understood in different cultural contexts? How
have the religious-based knowledge systems been displaced in their
hegemonic role by scientific knowledge? In which ways do the agents
of hegemonic, orthodox knowledge interact with the representatives
of deviating, heterodox knowledge? These and many other questions
are addressed in this volume.
This book documents the conference on The Science and Religion
Dialogue: Past and Future, held at the University of Heidelberg,
Germany, October 25-29, 2012. The conference commemorated the 100th
anniversary of the birth of Sir John Templeton and the 25th
anniversary of the establishment of the John Templeton Foundation.
It brought together about 60 active participants, all of them
prominent scholars from many countries and many academic fields.
Most of them have been engaged in the Science and Religion Dialogue
for the last two or three decades. This book reports on multi-year
international and interdisciplinary research projects at leading
institutions. The contributions start with presentations by Hans
Joas, Martin Nowak and John Polkinghorne and range from Astronomy,
Mathematics, Physics and Biology to Philosophical Theology and
Religious Ethics. Special topics of the dialogue between Science
and Religion are also dealt with, such as Eschatology and
Anthropology; Cosmology, Creation, and Redemption; Evolutionary
Biology and the Spirit; and The Role of Thought Experiments in
Science and Theology.
The nature of money and its impact on society has long interested
scholars of economics, history, philosophy, law, and theology
alike, and the recent financial crisis has moved these issues to
the forefront of current public debate. In this study, authors from
a range of backgrounds provide a unified examination of the nature
and the purpose of money. Chapters cover the economic and social
foundations of money; the historical origins of money in ancient
Greece, China, the ancient Middle East, and medieval Europe;
problems of justice connected to the use of money in legal systems
and legal settlements, with examples both from ancient history and
today; and theological aspects of monetary and market exchange.
This stimulating interdisciplinary book, with its nontechnical and
lively discussion, will appeal to a global readership working in
the interfaces of economics, law and religion.
Do traditional distinctions between "belief" and "knowledge"
still make sense? How are differences between knowledge and belief
understood in different cultural contexts? This book explores
conflicts between various types of knowledge, especially between
orthodox and heterodox knowledge systems, ranging from religious
fundamentalism to heresies within the scientific community itself.
Beyond addressing many fields in the academy, the book discusses
learned individuals interested in the often puzzling spatial and
cultural disparities of knowledge and clashes of knowledge.
Die vorliegende Arbeit moechte zeigen, wie Karl Barth in seiner
Auseinandersetzung mit dem Religionsbegriff zu den Thesen 'Religion
als Unglaube' und 'die christliche Religion als die einzig
wirkliche und wahre Religion' in der Kirchlichen Dogmatik (KD) 17 -
Gottes Offenbarung als Aufhebung der Religion -gelangt. Sie
beschaftigt sich mit Barths AEusserungen zum Verhaltnis von
Religion und Wahrheit im Zeitraum von 1909 bis 1938 und richtet
sich auf die konstruktive Rolle von 'Religion' und damit auf die
Frage, welche argumentative Rolle und Funktion Barth dem
Religionsbegriff zuweist. Daruber hinaus koennte die konstruktive
Rolle von 'Religion' in Barths Theologie der zeitgenoessischen
Religionswissenschaft eine neue Perspektive eroeffnen.
The nature of money and its impact on society has long interested
scholars of economics, history, philosophy, law, and theology
alike, and the recent financial crisis has moved these issues to
the forefront of current public debate. In this study, authors from
a range of backgrounds provide a unified examination of the nature
and the purpose of money. Chapters cover the economic and social
foundations of money; the historical origins of money in ancient
Greece, China, the ancient Middle East, and medieval Europe;
problems of justice connected to the use of money in legal systems
and legal settlements, with examples both from ancient history and
today; and theological aspects of monetary and market exchange.
This stimulating interdisciplinary book, with its nontechnical and
lively discussion, will appeal to a global readership working in
the interfaces of economics, law and religion.
|
God the Spirit (Paperback)
Michael Welker; Translated by John F. Hoffmeyer
|
R1,139
R930
Discovery Miles 9 300
Save R209 (18%)
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
This title focuses purely on company accounts, rather than dealing
with areas such as group accounts, sole traders and partnerships.
Many accounting reference works are aimed at larger businesses and
take into account the additional requirements imposed by the
Financial Services Authority (for listed companies) or
international financial reporting standards. It is aimed at
accountants in small to medium sized companies as it will focus on
the UK accounting requirements as they affect private companies,
and will pay particular attention to the exemptions available to
companies that qualify as small under the Companies Act 1985.
Die Studie befasst sich mit Karl Barths (1886-1968) Rezeption der
Theologie Isaak August Dorners (1809-1884). Sie untersucht, wie
sich Barth, ein dialektischer Theologe, zu einem in Schleiermachers
Tradition stehenden Vermittlungstheologen verhalt. Barths Rezeption
der Theologie Dorners erfolgte von seiner fruhen Munsteraner Zeit
(1926) bis zum Ende der 30er Jahre. Einerseits steht Barth in
dieser Zeit aufgrund seiner schon vorher feststellbaren Entwicklung
als dialektischer Theologe der neuprotestantischen Theologie
kritisch gegenuber und er problematisiert Dorners Theologie, da sie
die anthropozentrische, spekulative Theologie der Neuzeit nicht
uberwinden konnte. Andererseits nimmt er in Dorners Theologie eine
Moeglichkeit zur adaquaten Erfassung der Souveranitat Gottes wahr.
Das gilt besonders fur dessen Trinitatslehre.
|
You may like...
Calvin
Michael Mullett
Hardcover
R3,962
Discovery Miles 39 620
|