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If God cannot control free creatures, then how did the biblical authors interact with God's revelation to produce the biblical text? God Speaks begins by exploring and asserting a number of problematic issues facing popular notions of Inspiration today. Gordon then begins to offer an interdisciplinary solution utilizing Thomas Jay Oord's theology of Essential Kenosis and revealing how it provides a better theological basis for developing a doctrine of Biblical Inspiration. If God cannot control the biblical authors, then what they produce as the biblical text is not revelation in and of…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
If God cannot control free creatures, then how did the biblical authors interact with God's revelation to produce the biblical text? God Speaks begins by exploring and asserting a number of problematic issues facing popular notions of Inspiration today. Gordon then begins to offer an interdisciplinary solution utilizing Thomas Jay Oord's theology of Essential Kenosis and revealing how it provides a better theological basis for developing a doctrine of Biblical Inspiration. If God cannot control the biblical authors, then what they produce as the biblical text is not revelation in and of itself, but a contextualized human response to that revelation. With the rising popularity of Essential Kenosis, the dismantling of popular notions of inspiration through historical criticism, and a reclaiming of the interpretative methods of the early church, God Speaks puts forth a doctrine of inspiration and revelation that better accounts for these realities while more faithfully securing our allegiance to Christ.
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Autorenporträt
Gabriel Gordon is a Jewish Anglo-Orthodox Episcopal follower of Yeshua. He has a master's in biblical studies from Portland Seminary and a bachelor's from Oklahoma Baptist University where he studied anthropology and missiology. He is currently a graduate student at Marquette University where he studies historical theology with a focus on early Greek and Syriac speaking Christianity. He lives with his wife, Hannah, and their dog, Karl Barth, in Milwaukee.