Jesus in trinitarian perspective : an intermediate christology / [edited by] Fred Sanders & Klaus Issler ; foreword by Gerald Bray.
Publication details: Nashville, Tenn. : B & H Academic, ©2007.Description: xii, 244 pages ; 23 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780805444223
- 080544422X
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | BSOP Library | GC | BT205 J49 2007 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 00057337 |
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BT205 Ed9 2003 Christ before creation : | BT205 F32 2018 Jesus the Lord according to Paul the Apostle : | BT205 F32 2018 c.2 Jesus the Lord according to Paul the Apostle : | BT205 J49 2007 Jesus in trinitarian perspective : an intermediate christology / | BT205 J59 2006 Heart of the Cross : a postcolonial christology / | BT205 L47 2001 The victory of the Lamb / | BT205 N72 2001 Jesus Christ and the life of the mind / |
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Chalcedonian categories for the Gospel narrative / Fred Sanders -- The eternal Son of God in the social Trinity / J. Scott Horrell -- The one person who is Jesus Christ : the patristic perspective / Donald Fairbairn -- One person, two natures : two metaphysical models of the Incarnation / Garrett J. DeWeese -- Christ's atonement : a work of the Trinity / Bruce A. Ware -- Jesus' example : prototype of the dependent, spirit-filled life / Klaus Issler.
Jesus in Trinitarian Perspective features six highly respected scholars from schools such as Erskine Theological Seminary, Talbot School of Theology, Dallas Theological Seminary, and Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. These scholars address an issue that has a significant impact on the way Christians should approach everyday evangelism but is often ignored: the fundamental fact that the Savior who died on the cross and rose from the dead is the eternal second person of the Trinity. The Christian church has confessed this truth since the early centuries, but many modern theologies have denied or ignored its implications. To clarify the complex issue, these writers approach “post-Chalcedonian” (451 AD) Christology from a variety of disciplines—historical, philosophical, systematic, and practical—thoroughly examining the importance of keeping Jesus Christ in trinitarian perspective.