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From gospel text to liturgical performance the ecclesiological implications of Hans W. Frei's biblical hermeneutic /Fog, Caren Melissa, January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M. Div.)--Emmanuel School of Religion, 2007. / Vita. Description based on Microfiche version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 57-65).
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The theology of revelation and the epistemology of Christian belief : the compatibility and complementarity of the theological epistemologies of Karl Barth and Alvin Plantinga /Diller, Kevin S. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.) - University of St Andrews, May 2008.
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'Solved by sacrifice' : Austin Farrer, fideism, and the evidence of faith /MacSwain, Robert Carroll. January 2010 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.) - University of St Andrews, May 2010.
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The correlation of ontology and the doctrine of God in the philosophical theology of Paul TillichKwon, Kyeong-Seog. January 1991 (has links)
Thesis (S.T.M.)--Yale University Divinity School, 1991. / Abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 72-77).
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John Milbank and the creation of truth dialectical readings /Lawrence, Robert Wayne. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Notre Dame, 2005. / Thesis directed by David Burrell, C.S.C. for the Department of Theology. "December 2005." Includes bibliographical references (leaves 222-226).
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Duns Scotus' doctrine of individuation in Quaestiones super libros metaphysicorum Aristotelis book VII, q. 13 and Ordinatio II, d. 3 a comparison /Watts, Jordan D. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. L.)--Catholic University of America, 2006. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 69-71).
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Cultivating wilderness : a phenomenological theology of wilderness spirituality and environmental ethicsPritchett, Justin William January 2018 (has links)
In the wake of Lynne White's 1967 thesis contending Christianity is the historical root of our environmental crises, theologians have struggled to articulate an environmentally friendly theology. These efforts, while substantive, have proven insufficient to reorient Christian environmental ethics and practice en mass. Pope Francis argues in Laudato Si, that dogma, doctrine, and arguments are always insufficient for redeeming human relations and instead calls for an ecological conversion via a wild spirituality. I answer this call by offering a phenomenological theology of wilderness spirituality that grounds environmental ethics in the experience of encountering God in the wilderness. I use the existential phenomenology of American philosopher Henry Bugbee and Czech phenomenologist Erazim Kohák to map phenomenological practice as spiritual discipline. By engaging in lived, practical, and embodied practices bracketing one's intellectual and physical common-sense attitudes, the practitioner is opened to and made receptive to the redeeming work of God. This topology of phenomenology as spiritual discipline illustrates how wilderness functions in scripture. In conversation with Dietrich Bonhoeffer's reading of the Genesis 3 curse as both curse and promise I argue that wilderness functions by killing sicut-deus-humanity and thereby becomes the site of redemption, healing, and benediction. This spiritual and ethical function of wilderness is also evident in the early desert monks and grounds their praxis and ethical development. Ultimately, it is by being made vulnerable and receptive in the wilderness that the early desert monks were able to participate in the reestablishment of the paradisaical innocence. This suggests that redeemed relations between humanity and the non-human world is dependent upon the sanctifying experience of wilderness deconstruction and encounter and thus the efficacy of environmental ethics depends upon the invitation to practice a wilderness spirituality.
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Organic knowing : the theological epistemology of Herman BavinckSutanto, Nathaniel Gray January 2018 (has links)
Recent scholarship has increasingly recognized the unity of Herman Bavinck's (1854-1921) thought, shedding the once-predominant reading that Bavinck was a conflicted thinker caught between modernity and orthodoxy. There were 'two Bavincks', the secondary literature claimed. The catalyst of unity for Bavinck's thinking is located in his deployment of organic language to characterize particular theological loci. The organic motif stems from Bavinck's Trinitarian doctrine of God, according to which God exists as the archetypal and self-existent Three-in-One. Creation, then, is an ectypal reflection of the triune Godhead, and as such can be described as an organism comprising of many unities-in-diversities. This new reading, propelled by James Eglinton, argued that for Bavinck the Trinity ad intra leads to an organic cosmology ad extra. Though this reading has showcased the unity of Bavinck's thought in general, current scholarship on Bavinck's theological epistemology remains fractured along the lines of the 'two Bavinck' thesis, with two sides that emphasize, respectively, the modern strand of Bavinck's thinking or his classical, orthodox, side. This thesis reinvestigates the primary texts in which Bavinck discusses epistemology and argues that the organic motif is also the lens through which his epistemology is to be read. In doing so, this thesis argues that the organic motif allowed Bavinck to utilize both classical (Thomistic) and post-Kantian sources in a way that produces coherence rather than inconsistency. Thus, it is unnecessary to pit Bavinck's use of classical sources against his use of modern sources: particular deployment is not systematic endorsement. The thesis, then, is that a Trinitarian doctrine of God ad intra produces not merely an organic cosmology ad extra, but also an organic epistemology. It then proceeds to demonstrate this in two ways. First, the thesis observes that Bavinck characterizes the sciences (wetenschappen) as a single organism made up of a unity-in-diversity. The specialization and divisions of the sciences mean that each field has its own sphere of existence with unique grounds and methodologies, but there is an underlying theological unity between them that relativizes that diversity precisely because all of the sciences are theological. Second, for Bavinck subjective knowledge can organically correspond with objects because both participate in a larger, organic universe. Mental representations connect with the world because all of creation is primordially interconnected by way of God's organic design. In each of these steps Bavinck's eclectic use of sources and overall creativity and unity are displayed. This thesis also relates his discussion both to his interlocutors and contemporary philosophical and analytic epistemology. Hence, this thesis not only demonstrates the overall coherence of Bavinck's thought, thereby further eradicating ill-conceived notions of there being 'two-Bavincks', but also showcases potentially generative insights concerning the place of theology within the university and the resources theology might provide for philosophical epistemology.
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Action, image, and practice the revival of aesthetics in the theologies of Nicholas Wolterstorff and Frank Burch Brown /McClain, Daniel Wade. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, 2003. / Abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 136-140).
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Biblical narrative, the Christian form of life a study of the inadequacy of a representationalist philosophy of language and of the primacy of a performative philosophy of language /Rumfelt, Janet L. January 1995 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Denver Seminary, 1995. / Includes bibliographical references ([4] leaves in second sequence).
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