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Trinitarian theology after Barth / edited by Myk Habets and Phillip Tolliday ; foreword by John Webster.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Princeton theological monograph series ; 148.Publisher: Eugene, Or. : Pickwick Publications, ©2011Description: 1 online resource (xviii, 400 pages) : illustrationsContent type:
Media type:
Carrier type:
ISBN:
  • 9781498276498
  • 1498276490
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Print version:: Trinitarian theology after Barth.DDC classification:
  • 231/.044 23
LOC classification:
  • BT111.3 .T72 2011eb
Other classification:
  • online - EBSCO
Online resources:
Contents:
Role of the Holy Spirit in knowing the triune God / Paul D. Molnar -- Divine light: some reflections after Barth / Ivor J. Davidson -- Spatiality of God / Murray Rae -- Doctrine of the Trinity after Barth: an attempt to reconstruct Barth's doctrine in the light of his later christology / Bruce L. McCormack -- Election, Trinity, and the history of Jesus: reading Barth with Rowan Williams / Benjamin Myers -- Obedience and subordination in Barth's Trinity / Phillip Tolliday -- Filioque? Nein: a proposal for coherent coinherence / Myk Habets -- Triune savior of the world / Andrew Burgess -- Contribution of Karl Barth's doctrine of appropriation to a trinitarian ecclesiology / Adam McIntosh -- Why do humans die? An exploration of the necessity of death in the theology of Robert Jenson with reference to Karl Barth's discussion of "ending time" / Andrew Nicol -- Prayer, particularity, and the subject of divine personhood: who are Brümmer and Barth invoking when they pray? / John C. McDowell -- Doctrine of the Trinity: the major stumbling block in inter-religious dialogue? Reflections on the methodological function of theological concepts / Ulrike Link-Wieczorek ; translated by Duncan Reid -- Temporality, triunity, and the third article: the mediatorial work of the Holy Spirit in Karl Barth's Church dogmatics / Antony Glading -- Dynamic stillness of God: trinitarian conceptions of divine immutability and impassibility / Haydn D. Nelson -- Reconciling normative tensions in biomedical ethics: constructing an ethics of coinherence informed by the trinitarian theology of Karl Barth / Ashley Moyse -- Vestiges of Trinity / Nicola Hoggard-Creegan.
Review: "Like the Dogmatics in which it is arguably the driving force, Barth's doctrine of the Trinity is a magisterial but incomplete achievement. Why magisterial? Partly because of its sheer scale and artistry. Partly because Barth understood very clearly at a critical point in the history of Protestant theology that it is from Trinitarian teaching that Christian dogmatics derives not only the entirety of what it has to say about God, but also what it has to say about the relation of God and creatures; others before him in the modern Protestant tradition had let the doctrine of the Trinity loose in this way (Dorner's seriously neglected System of Christian Doctrine is a case in point), but Barth did so with consummate skill and sense of occasion. Partly, again, because of the descriptive depth of what Barth has to say. Throughout the Dogmatics Barth exercised a capacity for astonished portrayal of the substance of Trinitarian teaching - not only in the doctrine of reconciliation, considered by many to be his most satisfying account of God's triune being, but also in the early treatment in I/1 which, despite its stiffness at certain points, contains some of the finest passages of dogmatic writing Barth ever produced. . Barth's Trinitarian theology continues to be a commanding presence. The essays which follow, with, after and beyond Barth, testify both to the fact that interpretation of one of Barth's doctrinal convictions is an open matter, and to the seemingly inexhaustible resourcefulness of what he has to say."--Forward by John B. Webster
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number URL Status Notes Barcode
eBook eBook Biblioteca "Angelicum" Pont. Univ. S.Tommaso d'Aquino Nuvola online online - EBSCO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Online access Not for loan (Accesso limitato) Accesso per gli utenti autorizzati / Access for authorized users (ebsco)1415859

Includes bibliographical references and indexes.

Role of the Holy Spirit in knowing the triune God / Paul D. Molnar -- Divine light: some reflections after Barth / Ivor J. Davidson -- Spatiality of God / Murray Rae -- Doctrine of the Trinity after Barth: an attempt to reconstruct Barth's doctrine in the light of his later christology / Bruce L. McCormack -- Election, Trinity, and the history of Jesus: reading Barth with Rowan Williams / Benjamin Myers -- Obedience and subordination in Barth's Trinity / Phillip Tolliday -- Filioque? Nein: a proposal for coherent coinherence / Myk Habets -- Triune savior of the world / Andrew Burgess -- Contribution of Karl Barth's doctrine of appropriation to a trinitarian ecclesiology / Adam McIntosh -- Why do humans die? An exploration of the necessity of death in the theology of Robert Jenson with reference to Karl Barth's discussion of "ending time" / Andrew Nicol -- Prayer, particularity, and the subject of divine personhood: who are Brümmer and Barth invoking when they pray? / John C. McDowell -- Doctrine of the Trinity: the major stumbling block in inter-religious dialogue? Reflections on the methodological function of theological concepts / Ulrike Link-Wieczorek ; translated by Duncan Reid -- Temporality, triunity, and the third article: the mediatorial work of the Holy Spirit in Karl Barth's Church dogmatics / Antony Glading -- Dynamic stillness of God: trinitarian conceptions of divine immutability and impassibility / Haydn D. Nelson -- Reconciling normative tensions in biomedical ethics: constructing an ethics of coinherence informed by the trinitarian theology of Karl Barth / Ashley Moyse -- Vestiges of Trinity / Nicola Hoggard-Creegan.

"Like the Dogmatics in which it is arguably the driving force, Barth's doctrine of the Trinity is a magisterial but incomplete achievement. Why magisterial? Partly because of its sheer scale and artistry. Partly because Barth understood very clearly at a critical point in the history of Protestant theology that it is from Trinitarian teaching that Christian dogmatics derives not only the entirety of what it has to say about God, but also what it has to say about the relation of God and creatures; others before him in the modern Protestant tradition had let the doctrine of the Trinity loose in this way (Dorner's seriously neglected System of Christian Doctrine is a case in point), but Barth did so with consummate skill and sense of occasion. Partly, again, because of the descriptive depth of what Barth has to say. Throughout the Dogmatics Barth exercised a capacity for astonished portrayal of the substance of Trinitarian teaching - not only in the doctrine of reconciliation, considered by many to be his most satisfying account of God's triune being, but also in the early treatment in I/1 which, despite its stiffness at certain points, contains some of the finest passages of dogmatic writing Barth ever produced. . Barth's Trinitarian theology continues to be a commanding presence. The essays which follow, with, after and beyond Barth, testify both to the fact that interpretation of one of Barth's doctrinal convictions is an open matter, and to the seemingly inexhaustible resourcefulness of what he has to say."--Forward by John B. Webster

Print version record.