Human Anguish and God's Power: Current Issues in Theology, cartea 16
Autor David H. Kelseyen Limba Engleză Hardback – 16 dec 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781108836975
ISBN-10: 1108836976
Pagini: 448
Dimensiuni: 145 x 223 x 29 mm
Greutate: 0.68 kg
Editura: Cambridge University Press
Colecția Cambridge University Press
Seria Current Issues in Theology
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1108836976
Pagini: 448
Dimensiuni: 145 x 223 x 29 mm
Greutate: 0.68 kg
Editura: Cambridge University Press
Colecția Cambridge University Press
Seria Current Issues in Theology
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
1. Introduction: consoling anguish and making it worse; I. Glory: 2. The glory of the triune God; II. Kingdom: 3. God's intrinsic “sovereignty”; 4. Creation, providence, and theologically problematic pastoral consolation; 5. The triune God's sovereignty in two registers; 6. Excursus: must God have only one eternal purpose?; III. Power: 7. Assumptions about God's power in problematic pastoral remarks; 8. The triune God's intrinsic power; 9. The triune God's power in two registers; 10. The “uselessness: of the triune God; 11. Stammering in praise of the useless triune God.
Recenzii
'The central message of Human Anguish and God's Power is intensely practical, reminding Christians that when they seek to speak of God in the face of suffering, they can only stammer. Yet in exploring the reasons for this stammering – the impossibility of synthesizing into a single account the different ways in which God works to bless us – David Kelsey manages something very close to a dogmatics in miniature, ranging across the full sweep of God's creative, reconciling and redeeming work with a combination of pastoral and theological sensitivity that shows how even stammering can give powerful witness to God's glory.' Ian A. McFarland, Robert W. Woodruff Professor of Theology, Emory University
'In these pages, the distinguished theologian David Kelsey explores God's power, with an eye to sensitive pastoral concern for believers who struggle in the face of tragic suffering. Exposing all the false ways that cultural notions of “useful” force are projected onto the traditional notion of divine power, Kelsey commends an understanding of providence as the glory of God's sovereignty manifested in three, interrelated biblical plots that reveal how the power of the Trinitarian God is actualized in God's own divine life and in God's relation to creation. Kelsey insightfully argues that scripture's diverse rendering of providential power sets the proper context for reflection on God's efficacy toward suffering, and the directions he charts will inform theological discussion for many years to come.' John E. Thiel, Fairfield University
'… a measured, thoroughly theological (both traditional, doctrinal, and biblical) approach to the question of suffering.' Kirsten Sanders, Henry Center For Theological Understanding
'… a robust work of doctrinal and biblical theology that offers a well-reasoned and compelling conception of divine power that moves beyond the notion of control and toward the notion of God's wise companionship and care.' Declan Kelly, Studies in Christian Ethics
'In these pages, the distinguished theologian David Kelsey explores God's power, with an eye to sensitive pastoral concern for believers who struggle in the face of tragic suffering. Exposing all the false ways that cultural notions of “useful” force are projected onto the traditional notion of divine power, Kelsey commends an understanding of providence as the glory of God's sovereignty manifested in three, interrelated biblical plots that reveal how the power of the Trinitarian God is actualized in God's own divine life and in God's relation to creation. Kelsey insightfully argues that scripture's diverse rendering of providential power sets the proper context for reflection on God's efficacy toward suffering, and the directions he charts will inform theological discussion for many years to come.' John E. Thiel, Fairfield University
'… a measured, thoroughly theological (both traditional, doctrinal, and biblical) approach to the question of suffering.' Kirsten Sanders, Henry Center For Theological Understanding
'… a robust work of doctrinal and biblical theology that offers a well-reasoned and compelling conception of divine power that moves beyond the notion of control and toward the notion of God's wise companionship and care.' Declan Kelly, Studies in Christian Ethics
Notă biografică
Descriere
The intrinsically 'glorious' God' is 'sovereign' in three different ways, each of which has a different sense of 'power.'