Reclaiming participation : Christ as God's life for all / Cynthia Peters Anderson.
Material type:
- 9781451478174 (pbk. : alk. paper)
- 1451478178 (pbk. : alk. paper)
- 248.3 23
- BT767.8 AND 2014
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
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Mzuzu University Library and Learning Resources Centre | Non-fiction | BT 767.8 AND 2014 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 16829 | Available | MzULM-016829 |
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BT 736.2 BEL 2009 Just war as Christian discipleship : | BT 736.2 CHA 2005 Between pacifism and Jihad : | BT 738 GIL 2012 Sociological theology / | BT 767.8 AND 2014 Reclaiming participation : | BT 972 JON 1998 Friends of God and prophets : | BV 245 CLO 2003 500 prayers for all occassions/ | BV 600.3 CHE 2008 Total church : |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 267-279) and indexes.
Deification in the early church and Cyril of Alexandria -- Barth : elected for covenant-partnership with God -- Balthasar : the christological analogy of being -- Realizing the promise : Barth's and Balthasar's conceptions of participation in the life of God -- Reclaiming God's vision for human life.
In an era that oscillates regularly between nihilism and the erosion of moral vision, on the one hand, and pseudo-gnostic myths of self-apotheosis on the other, the classical Christian claim of human participation in the divine as the story of the transformation of human life in its physical, moral, spiritual, and eschatological dimensions takes on radical, counter-cultural color. It is an affirmation that offers hope and meaning for humanity secured by God's participation in human life through Jesus Christ. The Christological ground of this claim is crucial to secure and animate the argument of this text. The author performs, in this, a retrieval of the Christological vision of the unification of the divine and the human in the single subject of Jesus Christ as the programmatic center point of human transformation and participation, articulated particularly by Cyril of Alexandria. The patristic pattern is used as a lens through which to examine and assess modern iterations -- those of Karl Barth and Hans Urs von Balthasar. In this, the author provides a critical updating of this vital classical theme, annotating a vision of divine life opened up for created participation that can foster hope in the climes of contemporary life.
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