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Life after death Paul's argument for the resurrection of the dead in I Cor. 15 /Cavallin, Hans Clemens Caesarius, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis--Uppsala. / Includes indexes in v. 1. Includes bibliographical references (v. 1, p. 217-243).
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Resurrection of Organophosphorus-Aged Acetylcholinesterase via Mannich Bases Derived from ProlineWard, Nathan Andrew January 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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Resurrection hope in the African context : challenging Luo beliefs and practices concerning death / Victor Benard OwuorOwuor, Victor Benard January 2006 (has links)
This study investigates how the Biblical teaching on death and the resurrection can provide
the appropriate doctrinal challenge to the problem of the pervasive and persistent fear of death
amongst the Luo people of Kenya. It therefore examines the Luo traditional beliefs and
customs surrounding death in order to establish its contribution to the fear of death, even
amongst some Luo Christians. A Biblical-theological study of death and the afterlife provides
the doctrinal antidote necessary to rescue and transform a people under bondage to fear, thus
outlining the basis for hope in a life beyond physical death through the doctrine of the
resurrection.
The research commences with a description of Luo traditional beliefs concerning death and
dying, and outlines the related Luo customs in relation to their belief in the spirit-world. The
contention is that these beliefs result in the fear of death, while the lack of Biblical
understanding even amongst some Luo Christians has led to their ignorance of the Biblical
teaching on death, and thus a loss of the assurance found in the resurrection of Christ. Death
and the afterlife is carefully examined from a Biblical-theological perspective in order to
demonstrate how the doctrine of the resurrection can function as a 'rescue doctrine' for those
affected by the pervasive and persistent fear of death.
The study also explores the assurance of triumph over death as an eschatological reality in
keeping with Christ's work of redemption. Similarly, it is argued that triumph over evil and
malevolent spirits is guaranteed. In closing, the study explores the power of the Gospel of the
resurrected Christ to change lives and transform unbiblical practices and worldviews to
conform to his will. It is the resurrected Christ alone who has the power to transform the
moral and ethical values ingrained in any culture. / Thesis (M.A. (Dogmatics))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2007.
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We look for the resurrection of the dead : an analytic theological rethinking of the intermediate state and eschatological bodily resurrection in Christian theologyTurner, James Timothy January 2015 (has links)
Many in the Christian tradition accept three theological affirmations: (TA1) That bodily resurrection is not a superfluous hope of afterlife; (TA2) There is immediate post-mortem existence in Paradise; and (TA3) There is numerical identity between pre-mortem and post-resurrection human beings. Many of the same Christians also accept a robust doctrine of The Intermediate State, a paradisiacal disembodied state of existence following the biological death of a human person. I say The Intermediate State makes TAs 1 – 3 an inconsistent set. So, given these TAs, I say that there is no such thing as The Intermediate State and, therefore, it should be jettisoned from Christian theology. Chapter 1 aims to show that, if the TAs are true, Christian theology should jettison The Intermediate State. This is because The Intermediate State specifically undermines TA1. Along with The Intermediate State, Christian theologians should jettison the metaphysics of substance dualism. This is because substance dualism, a metaphysics that The Intermediate State requires, is either false or unmotivated. Substance dualism is false because, minimally, it conflicts with an argument St. Paul lays out in 1 Corinthians 15. And, even if it did not, it lacks motivation for Christian theology because there is no The Intermediate State. In Chapter 1, I advance theological arguments along these lines. If the arguments go through, Christian theology needs a way coherently to speak about afterlife that does not make use of these errant views. If TAs 1 – 3 are true, substance dualism is either false or unmotivated, and The Intermediate State does not obtain, Christian theology requires an amended metaphysics of human persons and an amended metaphysics of time. I attempt to offer such things in Chapters 2 – 5. Chapters 2 and 3 are given over to investigating physicalist and constitution metaphysics of human persons. I find the range of views wanting for a number of philosophical and theological reasons. Chapter 4 is an explication and defense of a hylemorphic metaphysics of human persons and a sustained argument against some leading hylemorphic conceptions that insist the soul of a biologically dead human person can survive the death of the body. Lastly, Chapter 5 offers a theory of time that completes the project’s goal: a coherent metaphysics within which a human person’s death is immediately followed by her eschatological (future) bodily resurrection so that the three TAs are an affirmed and consistent set.
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Speaking Rightly about Christian Hope and the Resurrection of the Body: Popular Religiosity, the Evolution of Church Teachings on the Soul and the Limits of Eschatological AssertionsBorro Barbosa, Cristiano Guilherme January 2019 (has links)
Thesis advisor: John R. Sachs / Thesis advisor: Margaret E. Guider / Catholic faith affirms human nature as an intrinsic fundamental unity between body and soul. Nonetheless, because the soul is immortal, Catholic teaching asserts that the soul survives even when it is separated from the body between death and resurrection. This belief in the survival of the separate soul can lead to a misguided understanding of the afterlife. It also has potentially detrimental consequences for the people of God in the present life. If the afterlife is conceived as a pure spiritual reality disconnected from the material world, the faith-filled practices of popular religiosity can lose their embodied character and be reduced to nothing more than pious spiritual devotions that are totally disengaged from the responsibilities and realities of Christian life. Guided by these concerns, this inquiry reflects on the manner in which Church teaching on the human soul is communicated through rites and rituals for the dead, especially in the selection and interpretation of biblical texts and in the choice of liturgical prayers. This study also reviews the historical evolution of Church teaching on the soul as well as the foundations that have contributed to Catholic understandings of theological anthropology and eschatology. Particular attention is given to Thomas Aquinas’s understanding of human nature and the human soul as the substantial form of the body. Further attention is given to the inherent difficulties encountered with regard to the notion of the separated soul after death. Challenged by questions raised in accord with theological reasoning, the separation of body and soul also is contested by contemporary scientific data suggesting that the brain has a central role in the generation of human intellectual functions. As Catholic theology has traditionally attributed these functions to the soul, it becomes evident that theology must be in dialogue with science if Church teaching is to give a more reasonable account of human nature. The problem of the separated soul is further examined in the light of the post-Vatican II theological debate on the notion of intermediate state. Two distinct views on this subject are presented in the works of Karl Rahner and Joseph Ratzinger. While Rahner considers the intermediate state as an intellectual framework for thinking about the afterlife and not a matter of binding faith, Ratzinger considers the intermediate state as an important belief connected to the doctrine of the immortality and the survival of the soul after death. This study argues that Rahner’s view is more appropriate as it leaves the question of the intermediate state open to theological debate while also affirming the symbolic dimension of eschatological language. In conclusion, this dissertation proposes Rahner’s hermeneutical principles for the interpretation of the Church’s eschatological assertions as a means to preserve foundational Catholic beliefs while respecting their metaphorical nature. It also proposes that all eschatological assertions of the Church only can be rightly understood and interpreted in light of the resurrection of the body, the central Christian hope and symbol of the permanent and fundamental body-soul unity of human nature. / Thesis (STD) — Boston College, 2019. / Submitted to: Boston College. School of Theology and Ministry. / Discipline: Sacred Theology.
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A relevância da historicidade de Jesus de Nazaré para a compreensão da mensagem do Reino de DeusSilva, Mina Solange Generoso 30 August 2012 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2012-08-30 / The Divine Revelation for the God Verb Incarnation puts us in front of the human revelation. From this salvific event, Jesus humanity brings a meaning to our humanity. Jesus of Nazareth shortens distances previously abyssal between the divine and human and presents itself as a paradigm and origin of the new human family. A return to its history, your praxis and message, is a return to the origin and basis of our faith,since this Jesus of Nazareth Village is proclaimed the Christ.
The God s Word took flesh and brought cure, deliverance, hope of salvation for those who were already lost in the eyes of all oppressive society. Questioner, denunciatory and uncomfortable Word, that finds, therefore, resistance, thorny and stony lands and not a few opponents. Jesus of Nazareth dies, but not his announcement. This one perpetuates by his Spirit actions in the Christian community, in the Risen proclamation and by the concrete actions of justice, solidarity, sharing and compassion by little of God .
The man is rescued from the anti-Kingdom powers and inserted to the eschatological reality of a world that God can truly reign. The Risen is seen by the faith community as an embodiment of this Kingdom inaugurated in human history for Jesus of Nazareththat nowadays, by the church, goes to its consummation until He comes . While we wait his coming, we already try to live as risen, generating life, fighting against death powers in all its levels, with the same weapon wielded by Jesus: the unconditional love to Father and Brothers / A Revelação Divina pela Encarnação do Verbo de Deus nos coloca frente à revelação do humano. Desde este evento salvífico, a humanidade de Jesus traz sentido à nossa humanidade. Jesus de Nazaré encurta distâncias outrora abissais entre o divino e o humano e se apresenta como paradigma e origem da nova família humana. Um retorno à sua história, sua práxis e mensagem, é um retorno à origem e alicerce de nossa fé, pois que este Jesus da Vila de Nazaré é proclamado o Cristo.
A Palavra de Deus tomou corpo e trouxe cura, libertação, esperança de salvação para os que já estavam perdidos aos olhos de toda uma sociedade opressora. Palavra questionadora, denunciadora e incômoda que encontra, portanto, resistência, terrenos espinhosos e pedregosos e não poucos opositores. Jesus de Nazaré morre, mas não seu anúncio. Este se perpetua pela ação de seu Espírito na comunidade cristã, no anúncio do Ressuscitado e através de ações concretas de justiça, solidariedade, partilha e compaixão pelos pequenos de Deus .
O homem é resgatado dos poderes do anti-Reino e inserido na realidade escatológica de um mundo em que Deus possa verdadeiramente reinar. A Ressurreição é vista pela comunidade de fé como a concretização deste Reino que por Jesus de Nazaré se historicizou e que hoje, através da Igreja, caminha para sua plenificação até que Ele venha . Enquanto aguardamos sua vinda procuramos viver, já como ressuscitados, ou seja, gerando vida, lutando contra os poderes da morte em todos os seus níveis, com a mesma arma empunhada outrora por Jesus: o amor incondicional ao Pai e aos irmãos
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Traditional Apologetics in a Postconciliar Church: From Scholasticism to Combinationalism and BeyondSiniscalchi, Glenn B. 16 April 2015 (has links)
Recognizing that Christians cannot adequately understand the mysteries of faith from a single vantage point, Catholic theologians have been keen on emphasizing the multidimensional nature of theological understanding since Vatican II. The advantage of such a method has helped believers to understand the rich, in-depth quality of Catholic faith.<br>One of the fields of theology which has not been discussed in the models approach, however, is apologetics&hibar;which includes as one of its aspects the art and science of defending the doctrines and practices of the Catholic Church. When all of the relevant passages in the documents of Vatican II are taken into consideration, a unique apologetical approach emerges that incorporates key advances as they emerged historically from the Church's apologists. Each of the individual apologetic systems from the past will be shown to have its own particular strengths and weaknesses. By way of contrast, I will argue that the best way to "make a defense for" the Gospel in a postconciliar church is to advance the integrated model of the Council. This integrated model of Catholic defense is called combinationalism. The interests and views of the apologists are proven to be complementary rather than competing.<br>This integrated model helps apologists and evangelists to recognize that although one approach might be needed in a certain context, it would be an egregious mistake to take that one system and use it as the exclusive means to reach persons situated within different circumstances and cultural contexts. This essay will not only exploit the different apologetic models in the post-Vatican II period, it will also serve as a serious work of apologetics in its own right by focusing on certain challenges as test cases to highlight the pertinence and livelihood of each model. / McAnulty College and Graduate School of Liberal Arts; / Theology / PhD; / Dissertation;
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A New and Living Way: Atonement and the Logic of Resurrection in the Epistle to the HebrewsMoffitt, David McCheyne January 2010 (has links)
<p>The New Testament book known as the epistle to the Hebrews contains little obvious reference to Jesus' resurrection. Modern interpreters generally account for this relative silence by noting that the author's soteriological and christological concerns have led him to emphasize Jesus' death and exaltation while ignoring, spiritualizing, or even denying his resurrection. In particular, the writer's metaphorical appeal to the Yom Kippur sacrifice, with its dual emphasis on the slaughter of the victim and the presentation of the victim's blood by the high priest, allows him to explain the salvific significance of Jesus' death and exaltation. The crucifixion can be likened to the slaughter of the victim, while Jesus' exaltation in heaven can be likened to the high priest entering the holy of holies. In this way the cross can be understood as an atoning sacrifice. Such a model leaves little room for positive or distinct reflection on the soteriological or christological significance of the resurrection. </p>
<p>This study argues that the soteriology and high-priestly Christology the author develops depend upon Jesus' bodily resurrection and ascension into heaven. The work begins with a survey of positions on Jesus' resurrection in Hebrews. I then present a case for the presence and role of Jesus' bodily resurrection in the text. First, I demonstrate that the writer's argument in Heb 1-2 for the elevation of Jesus above the angelic spirits assumes that Jesus has his humanity--his blood and flesh--with him in heaven. Second, I show that in Heb 5-7 the writer identifies Jesus' resurrection to an indestructible life as the point when Jesus became a high priest. Third, I explain how this thesis makes coherent the author's consistent claims in Heb 8-10 that Jesus presented his offering to God in heaven. I conclude that Jesus' crucifixion is neither the place nor the moment of atonement for the author of Hebrews. Rather, in keeping with the equation in the Levitical sacrificial system of the presentation of blood to God with the presentation of life, Jesus obtained atonement where and when the writer says--when he presented himself in his ever-living, resurrected humanity before God in heaven. Jesus' bodily resurrection is, therefore, the hinge around which the high-priestly Christology and soteriology of Hebrews turns.</p> / Dissertation
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The resurrection predictions in the Synoptic Gospels as an indication of incipient knowledge in Jesus' self-understanding, with special reference to N.T. WrightBalasundaram, Sunil, January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Th. M.)--Westminster Theological Seminary, Philadelphia, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 73-77).
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Resurrection hope in the African context : challenging Luo beliefs and practices concerning death / Victor Benard OwuorOwuor, Victor Benard January 2006 (has links)
This study investigates how the Biblical teaching on death and the resurrection can provide
the appropriate doctrinal challenge to the problem of the pervasive and persistent fear of death
amongst the Luo people of Kenya. It therefore examines the Luo traditional beliefs and
customs surrounding death in order to establish its contribution to the fear of death, even
amongst some Luo Christians. A Biblical-theological study of death and the afterlife provides
the doctrinal antidote necessary to rescue and transform a people under bondage to fear, thus
outlining the basis for hope in a life beyond physical death through the doctrine of the
resurrection.
The research commences with a description of Luo traditional beliefs concerning death and
dying, and outlines the related Luo customs in relation to their belief in the spirit-world. The
contention is that these beliefs result in the fear of death, while the lack of Biblical
understanding even amongst some Luo Christians has led to their ignorance of the Biblical
teaching on death, and thus a loss of the assurance found in the resurrection of Christ. Death
and the afterlife is carefully examined from a Biblical-theological perspective in order to
demonstrate how the doctrine of the resurrection can function as a 'rescue doctrine' for those
affected by the pervasive and persistent fear of death.
The study also explores the assurance of triumph over death as an eschatological reality in
keeping with Christ's work of redemption. Similarly, it is argued that triumph over evil and
malevolent spirits is guaranteed. In closing, the study explores the power of the Gospel of the
resurrected Christ to change lives and transform unbiblical practices and worldviews to
conform to his will. It is the resurrected Christ alone who has the power to transform the
moral and ethical values ingrained in any culture. / Thesis (M.A. (Dogmatics))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2007.
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