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An evaluation of the soteriology of John MurrayHarley, John January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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Communicating philosophically and theologically : a study of the dialogue between the mainstream Reformed and Edwardian traditions of the seventeenth to nineteenth centuries concerning sin and salvationHausam, Mark January 2009 (has links)
No description available.
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God's disposition toward humanity in the theology of John Calvin : one will or two? : an analysis of Calvin's teaching on the knowledge of God, predestination and the atonementBuckner, Forrest H. January 2015 (has links)
In the course of this study, we find that for Calvin, God has one righteous will that is expressed as two, decidedly asymmetrical dispositions toward humanity. For Calvin, the only God that can be known, proclaimed, and trusted is God the Father, the God of creation, election and redemption who relates to his people according to his fatherly love; for reasons known only to him, God inexplicably creates some whom he does not rescue from their sinful state of rebellion against him. We first examine Calvin's teaching on the knowledge of God and discover that God has revealed his unchanging nature to those with faith. God's loving, righteous, wise, good, powerful, judging (of evil), and holy nature is exhibited in creation and providence, in Scripture, and most of all in Christ. We next explore Calvin's teaching on predestination and discover that God's one, secret, righteous will is expressed in two, decidedly asymmetrical wills toward humanity: (1) God's disclosed electing will that directly corresponds with God's nature and is extended to all but only effected in the elect; (2) God's veiled reprobating will toward the reprobate that, from the human perspective, only corresponds to God's nature in part. We continue by examining Calvin's teaching on the reconciling work of Christ, finding that, for Calvin, creation and redemption clearly exhibit God's disclosed disposition toward humanity while demonstrating God's veiled disposition only in very small part. We then provide constructive analysis in three related areas: (1) Calvin's teaching on the intra-trinitarian relations, (2) the locus of mystery in Calvin's, Arminius', and Barth's accounts of predestination, and (3) the reclaimed logic of Mosaic sacrifice in relation to Calvin's atonement teaching. In the context of a concluding summary, we consider three biblical accounts that depict God as possessing one rather than two dispositions toward humanity.
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An analytical study of saving faith among Korean church members in San Diego, California a diagnosis of the situation and a prescription for improvement /Ahn, Kukwhan, January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (D. Miss.)--Western Seminary, Portland, OR, 2002. / Abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 180-189).
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Salvation, knowledge and faith : a Christian theological enquiry based on the soteriology of Emil BrunnerHey, John A. January 1984 (has links)
This study examines the nature of, the relationship between salvation, knowledge and faith in the specific context of Christian theology. It seeks to establish an epistemological basis for the Christian message of salvation in a culture which since the time of the Enlightenment has been highly sceptical of religious claims. This study begins with a critique of the theology of Emil Brunner. It accepts two of his theological premises; that human reason and philosophy cannot prove the truth of salvation, and that the salvation of which Christianity speaks does not address humanity like a bolt from the blue as some groundless revelation but on the basis of a point of contact between man and God, which allows humanity to recognise the salvific event. The distinction Brunner draws between 'personal' knowledge as an encounter between subjects, and 'objective' knowledge which is the construct of human reason enables him to speak of revelation in an unusual and original way. According to this thesis Christian revelation is at the same time rationally and 'personally' comprehensible, and yet not capable of being deduced or verified by human reason. However closer investigation reveals that Brunner's exposition of the incarnation as the 'personal' self-revelation of God within history is not coherent in itself. His understanding of both the 'personal' and the 'historical' is not so much derived from a natural understanding of personality and history, but rather from a use of those terms as defined by, an understanding of revelation which contains implicit within it the groundlessness and the 'alien' nature of revelation which, he sought to avoid. It is the contention of this thesis that in spite of Brunner's failure it is possible to use his basic categories of the 'historical' and the 'personal' to speak of salvation as the, confirmation within history of human 'personal' worth. This worth is ultimately indescribable and inexplicable in the categories of a contingent and finite world, and, as such, is open to a transcendent confirmation and validation. The Christian tradition, itself rooted in the tradition of Judaism, bears witness, like Judaism, to the experience of such a 'personal' validation and vindication. In this sense, therefore, the resurrection of Jesus, while offering no historical 'proof of the truth' on account of its essentially 'personal' nature, can be seen as a legitimate epistemological basis for an understanding of salvation, which still preserves the primacy of faith. However the focus upon the category of salvation, and salvation as an epistemological touchstone, reveals that the resurrection of Jesus confirms not so much the traditional distinctive Christological ontology, but rather a more all-embracing ontology of the gracious transcendence of love itself which resists the narrow and distinctive definitions of orthodoxy. In fact an epistemologically valid ontology of faith's activity in love allows the traditional ontologies of Christology, Soteriology and the Trinity to be seen as peripheral to a contemporary articulation of the Christian message of salvation on account of their dubious epistemological foundations.
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A strategy to promote church growth by developing indigenous churches in the resistant areas of IndiaKallimel, Josh P., January 1991 (has links)
Thesis (D. Miss.)--Western Conservative Baptist Seminary, 1991. / Abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 143-153).
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An analytical study of saving faith among Korean church members in San Diego, California a diagnosis of the situation and a prescription for improvement /Ahn, Kukwhan, January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (D. Miss.)--Western Seminary, Portland, OR, 2002. / Abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 180-189).
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An analytical study of saving faith among Korean church members in San Diego, California a diagnosis of the situation and a prescription for improvement /Ahn, Kukwhan, January 2002 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (D. Miss.)--Western Seminary, Portland, OR, 2002. / Abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 180-189).
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The influence of some ancient philosophical and religious traditions on the soteriology of early ChristianityGibson, Jan Albert 08 1900 (has links)
When reading the Bible in an independent way, i.e., not through the
lenses of any official Church dogma, one is amazed by the many
voices that come through to us. Add to this variety the literary finds
from Nag Hammadi, as well as the Dead Sea Scrolls, then the
question now confronting many spiritual pilgrims is how it came
about that these obviously diverse theologies, represented in the so-called
Old and New Testaments, were moulded into only one
"orthodox" result. In what way and to what degree were the many
Christian groups different and distinctive from one another, as well as
from other Jewish groups? Furthermore, what was the influence of
other religions, Judaism, the Mysteries, Gnostics and Philosophers on
the. development, variety of groups and ultimately on the
consolidation of "orthodox" soteriology? / Philosophy Practical and Systematic Theology / Th.M. (Systematic Theology)
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A new creation in ChristReddy, Randlee January 2005 (has links)
Submitted to the Faculty of Theology and Religion Studies in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Theology in the Department of Systematic Theology, Ethics and History of Christianity at the University of Zululand, 2005. / The title "A New Creation in Christ" served as the basis for the examination of the
definitive theological and Biblical concepts of the doctrines of creation, humanity, sin
and salvation. It integrated the foci of these doctrines, in constructing a paradigm for
establishing what is meant by the dissertation title, 'a new creation in creation.' To
understand a new creation theology requires a composite structuring of these
interrelated doctrines, since no doctrine can be understood vacuously. Humanity was
not created in an abstract or theoretical world, and neither were they placed in isolation
from creation. Instead, they were very much a part of the created order, and were
endowed with specific function or purpose. They interacted with a living world and
were accorded the responsibility as its stewards. The consideration of the facets of the
doctrine of creation enabled an understanding of humanity’s placement in creation, their
purpose and how sin affected creation. This informs the doctrine of humanity in
highlighting the biblical emphasis on humanity as the special creation of God. God
created humanity in his image, and this image is an intrinsic and indispensable part of
humanity's uniqueness and existence. The constitutional nature of humanity lies in its
conditional unity of the whole person. Man is a unity of the physical, the psychological
and the spiritual, all of which are purposed to enable him, in fulfilling the intentions of
the Creator. The doctrine of sin clarified how sin affected the conditional unity of man
i.e. the physical, the psychological and the spiritual dimensions. It further demonstrated
the domino effect on creation. This precarious position which humanity found
themselves in, required the intervention of God, through the incarnation of Christ
Salvation is the free gift of God in Christ in dealing with the problem of sin, and the
consequences thereof This free gift requires that a human being appropriate salvation
in Jesus Christ, through the acceptance of him in faith and repentance. This background
established a contextual understanding of a new creation in Christ. The definitive text
for our discussion was Paul's statement in 2 Corinthians 5:17 "If anyone is in Christ,
he is a new creation; the old has passed away, behold, the new has come." Paul's
statement incorporates two elements of salvation. "If anyone is in Christ" is suggestive
of the first element, which is the subjective nature of salvation. This involves the
believer's conversion through repentance and faith. The second element is the objective
nature of salvation. This is suggested in the next part of the statement "he is a new
creation", which is accomplished through the redemptive work of God in Christ. The
resident implication of the reference 'a new creation in Christ', is the inauguration of a
new humanity that has begun in Christ. A cyclic model for the practical outworking of a
new creation theology has been advocated in a threefold consideration of person hood,
community and discipleship.
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