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Adamic redemption in American literature: 1945 to the presentFrench, John Thatcher January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
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Salvation from Genesis to Revelation:God’s Eternal Relationship with UsFritz, Deborah Ann 26 April 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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The significance of the family to the child in care, with implications for effective social work intervention in child-caring institutions.Leung, Tin-yum, Richard, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.W.)--University of Hong Kong, 1978. / Typewritten.
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Is hearing the gospel necessary for salvation? : an historical and biblical study with special reference to infantsHakes, Stephen Harold 11 1900 (has links)
I have outlined some objections to soteriologies that presume that only
some are given a chance of eternal life. Such soteriologies can include
or exclude those mentally competent but lacking human evangelisation.
Fundamental to evaluating soteriologies I have looked at both what sin is
(being and doing) and what salvation consists in, as regards divine and
human interaction. On the one side I have considered God's goodness -
would such a being act unethically regarding man's eternity? On the
other hand I have looked at whether, and if so in what way, man is
required to respond - in what way or ways is chance (if at all) given.
Finally I have considered views about those who die in infancy.
Here I
have tentatively suggested my own theory which seeks to presume that
before death every human being may choose to accept of reject God, a
choice integral (I suggest) to salvation. / Department of Philosophy, Practical & Systematic Theology / M. Th. (Systematic Theology)
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A study in transitions : Wesley's soteriologyScott, Shawn A. January 1990 (has links)
The purpose of this thesis is to delineate the theological shifts that occurred in Wesley's post-Aldersgate soteriology. To realize this purpose, three distinct soteriological shifts in his thought will be examined. These shifts involve changes in how he understood the following: the conditions of redemption, the state of humanity and the scope of salvation. Through an examination of these shifts, three distinct phases (early, middle and late) were detected. In the early phase there appears to be a distinct Reformed bias; fallen human beings are totally depraved and can be redeemed only through explicit faith in Christ's atonement. In the two subsequent phases, an increasing emphasis is given to Arminian distinctives. Particular emphasis is given to the Arminian understanding of prevenient grace. In the middle phase, the Reformed and Arminian elements appear to co-exist within the same soteriological framework--reconciled through a tenuous and at times tortuous dialectic. This dialectic seems to crumble in the late phase. The Reformed elements are quietly dismissed; the Arminian elements dominate.
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Gerettet wovor? : die Heils- und Gerichtsverkündigung im Lukasevangelium / Saved from what? : the proclamation of salvation and judgement in Luke’s GospelBaum, Rainer 11 1900 (has links)
Text in German; abstract in German and English / Diese Studie untersucht die Gerichts- und Heilsverkündigung innerhalb des Lukasevangeliums, um herauszufinden, wie der Zusammenhang von Heil und Gericht dargestellt wird, welche Vorstellung von Gericht und Heil der ideale Rezipient gewinnen sollte und mit welcher Funktion bzw. Zielsetzung diese Aussagen gebraucht werden. Sind Heil und Gericht dabei zwei Seiten der gleichen Medaille oder liegen unterschiedliche Konzepte vor, die nicht wesentlich miteinander verknüpft sind? Dazu werden zentrale Texte des Lukasevangeliums, in denen sowohl eine Gerichts- als auch eine Heilsperspektive vermittelt werden, mit Hilfe der narrativen Exegese analysiert. Dem detaillierten Vergleich folgt eine Zusammenfassung der lukanischen Darstellung von Heil und Gericht. Die Studie endet mit einer kritischen Diskussion über die Auswirkungen auf die christliche Verkündigung in unserer Zeit. / This study examines the understanding of salvation and judgement in Luke’s Gospel. How is the correlation between salvation and judgement described, which perception should the ideal recipients gain, and for which function or intention are these statements used? Are salvation and judgement two sides of one coin or are they different concepts which are not linked? For this purpose, key texts which address both salvation and judgement are analysed by applying narrative- critical methodology. A detailed comparison is followed by a summary of the Lukan portrayal of salvation and judgement. The dissertation closes with a critical discussion of the implications for Christian proclamation in our day and age. / Biblical and Ancient studies / M. Th. (New Testament)
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Is hearing the gospel necessary for salvation? : an historical and biblical study with special reference to infantsHakes, Stephen Harold 11 1900 (has links)
I have outlined some objections to soteriologies that presume that only
some are given a chance of eternal life. Such soteriologies can include
or exclude those mentally competent but lacking human evangelisation.
Fundamental to evaluating soteriologies I have looked at both what sin is
(being and doing) and what salvation consists in, as regards divine and
human interaction. On the one side I have considered God's goodness -
would such a being act unethically regarding man's eternity? On the
other hand I have looked at whether, and if so in what way, man is
required to respond - in what way or ways is chance (if at all) given.
Finally I have considered views about those who die in infancy.
Here I
have tentatively suggested my own theory which seeks to presume that
before death every human being may choose to accept of reject God, a
choice integral (I suggest) to salvation. / Department of Philosophy, Practical and Systematic Theology / M. Th. (Systematic Theology)
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A study in transitions : Wesley's soteriologyScott, Shawn A. January 1990 (has links)
No description available.
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A baptist theology of the childMiller, Gordon Goldsbury 11 1900 (has links)
Baptists, who have traditionally emphasised the authority of
Scripture, agree strongly that New Testament teaching and
practice allows them to baptize only believers upon
profession of ~aith. There are, however, many remaining
questions concerning the relation of children to God and the
place of children in the church which are not as
straightforwardly answered in Scripture; here Baptists often
display little consensus.
Although the principles of corporate solidarity and of
individual responsibility operate in both Testaments, the
development of individual responsibility, already apparent
within later Old Testament history, is carried further in the
New Testament where there is evidence of some breakdown in
family solidarity and of division on the basis of individual
allegiance to Jesus. Discussion of the place of the child in
the early church to the fourth century centres around
questions of original sin, the 'innocence' of children, the
rise of infant baptism and the catachumenate. The historical
survey also investigates the development of Anabaptist, early
Baptist and modern Baptist views of childhood from the
sixteenth to the twentieth centuries.
Baptist perspectives in relation to four current issues in
the theology of the child are considered: original sin and
the 'age of accountability', infant salvation, 'faith
development' and child evangelism. The South African
situation is analysed by identifying amd interpreting areas
of agreement and areas of uncertainty indicated by the
results of a detailed questionnaire distributed amongst
Baptists during 1990-1991.
Baptists need to recognize that children of believers,
although not necessarily saved, are in a creative
relationship with the church, somewhat similar to that of the
catechumenate in the early church. Two particularly
problematic areas are the question of the appropriate age for
baptism, church membership and communion of children. This
is partly because although linked with faith rather than with
~ pastoral wisdom is needed to assess the evidence for
true faith in particular cases. In spite of the difficulties
to be faced, Baptist congregations and all Christians and
churches have much to gain from a careful consideration of
the theological issues related to the place of the child in
the church. / Philosophy, Practical & Systematic Theology / D. Th. (Systematic Theology)
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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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