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What about Evolution? (Hardcover)
April Maskiewicz Cordero, Douglas Estes, Telford Work
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R828
R683
Discovery Miles 6 830
Save R145 (18%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Telford Work examines some of the most important ways Jesus is "the
omega and the alpha"--the end and the beginning. Jesus alone
fulfills the divine purpose for all things, brings about the end of
the old world's evil and suffering, and begins eternity's new
creation. This core conviction is one of the deepest logics that
shapes Christian thinking and life. The author offers a unique,
big-picture introduction to how Jesus's life and death shape
Christian theology and practice and helps readers fully understand
Jesus's transformation of all things.
Karl Barth's legendary image of preaching with the Bible in one
hand and the newspaper in the other now has a matching image for
praying. In Ain't Too Proud to Beg Telford Work encourages praying
with a social documentary in one hand and the Lord's Prayer in the
other. The result is neither a commentary on the Lord's Prayer nor
a theology of prayer. Instead it is an exercise book that uses
prayer to strengthen our theological muscles. Work proposes that we
take whatever is happening in our world -- a political election or
the latest war will do -- and set the Lord's Prayer in the middle
of it. Let that prayer shed light on the scene and expose what
matters. Then pray it. Then look again and see how the prayer is a
response to what matters. These three movements give structure to
the book as a whole and to each chapter within it. Prayed this way,
the Lord's Prayer is always new and never quite the same.
Ecumenical, evangelical, postmodern, and irenic in tone, Ain't Too
Proud to Beg ends not with a neat scholarly wrap-up but with an
open-ended "Amen" -- three sparkling, joyful sermons -- a fitting
ending to Work's provocative exploration of prayer as a theological
process.
For all of the Bible's popularity both in the church and in Western
culture, confusion reigns about what the Bible is, its relationship
to God, its relationship to its human authors and readers, and its
proper use. Living and Active answers these fundamental questions
by looking anew at Scripture from the perspective of Christian
doctrine. Rather than treating the Bible as a sourcebook for
theology, Telford Work uses systematic theology to build a
compelling new doctrine of Scripture: the doctrine of God
establishes the Bible's triune character and purpose; the doctrine
of salvation explains the mission of Scripture in ancient Israel,
in the career of Jesus, and in the life of his followers; the
doctrine of the church relates the Bible's qualities to those of
its reading communities, describes the relation of Scripture and
tradition, and appreciates the Bible's role in worship and in
personal salvation. Drawing in this way on the full resources of
Christian dogmatics allows us to see the Bible at work
accomplishing God's purposes in the world. Throughout the book,
Work incorporates insights from the Eastern Orthodox, Roman
Catholic, Lutheran, Calvinist, Anabaptist, and evangelical
traditions in order to produce a truly ecumenical doctrine of
Scripture. He also interacts with patristic theology and practice,
historical-critical methods of interpretation, and postmodern
thought, refusing to draw lines between biblical studies, ethics,
history, philosophy, and theology. As a result, Living and Active
is the most comprehensive, balanced, and relevant statement of
Scripture now available. It clearly portrays the Bible as integral
to the economy of salvation and the life of the church, it offers
solutions to the current crisis of biblical authority and practice,
and it prescribes fruitful ways to preach, teach, and live
Scripture in today's world.
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