This work takes up the long-standing concern that the theology of Karl Barth has little to offer to consideration of Christian reason and instead shows that Barth's work contains a theologically weighty and spiritually bracing account of the proper ordering of Christian thought.
This work takes up the long-standing concern that the theology of Karl Barth has little to offer to consideration of Christian reason and instead shows that Barth's work contains a theologically weighty and spiritually bracing account of the proper ordering of Christian thought.
Martin Westerholm is Lecturer in Systematic Theology at Durham University.
Inhaltsangabe
* Introduction * 1: The Question of the Ordering of Thought * Part I: Paul, Faith, and the Question of the Ordering of Christian Thought * 2: Paul and the Problem of the Ordering of Thought * 3: Resurrection and the Ordering of Christian Thought * Part II: Anselm, Understanding, and the Question of the Ordering of Christian Thought * 4: The Question of the Ordering of Thought between Paul and Anselm * 5: Anselm, Understanding, and the Ordering of Christian Thought * Conclusion
* Introduction * 1: The Question of the Ordering of Thought * Part I: Paul, Faith, and the Question of the Ordering of Christian Thought * 2: Paul and the Problem of the Ordering of Thought * 3: Resurrection and the Ordering of Christian Thought * Part II: Anselm, Understanding, and the Question of the Ordering of Christian Thought * 4: The Question of the Ordering of Thought between Paul and Anselm * 5: Anselm, Understanding, and the Ordering of Christian Thought * Conclusion
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