Showing 421 - 430 of 2020 results

  • Contours of the Kuyperian Tradition: A Systematic Introduction, By Craig G. Bartholomew
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    Contours of the Kuyperian Tradition

    A Systematic Introduction

    by Craig G. Bartholomew

    Abraham Kuyper was, by any standard, one of the most extraordinary figures in modern Christian history. He was a Dutch Reformed minister, a gifted theologian, a prolific journalist, the leader of a political party, the cofounder of the Free University of Amsterdam (where he was professor of theology), a member of the Dutch Parliament, and eventually prime minister of the Netherlands.

    Kuyper's ...

  • Do We Need the New Testament?: Letting the Old Testament Speak for Itself, By John Goldingay
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    Do We Need the New Testament?

    Letting the Old Testament Speak for Itself

    by John Goldingay

    Do we need the Old Testament? That's a familiar question, often asked. But as an Old Testament scholar, John Goldingay turns that question on its head: Do we need the New Testament? What's new about the New Testament? After all, the Old Testament was the only Bible Jesus and the disciples knew. Jesus affirmed it as the Word of God. Do we need anything more? And what happens when we begin to look ...

  • Addiction and Virtue: Beyond the Models of Disease and Choice, By Kent Dunnington
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    Addiction and Virtue

    Beyond the Models of Disease and Choice

    Strategic Initiatives in Evangelical Theology

    by Kent Dunnington

    What is the nature of addiction? Neither of the two dominant models (disease or choice) adequately accounts for the experience of those who are addicted or of those who are seeking to help them. In this interdisciplinary work, Kent Dunnington brings the neglected resources of philosophical and theological analysis to bear on the problem of addiction. Drawing on the insights of Aristotle and Thomas ...

  • Come, Let Us Eat Together: Sacraments and Christian Unity, By George Kalantzis and Marc Cortez
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    Come, Let Us Eat Together

    Sacraments and Christian Unity

    Wheaton Theology Conference Series

    by George Kalantzis and Marc Cortez

    As Christians, we are called to seek the unity of the one body of Christ. But when it comes to the sacraments, the church has often been—and remains—divided. What are we to do? Can we still gather together at the same table? Based on the lectures from the 2017 Wheaton Theology Conference, this volume brings together the reflections of Protestant, Roman Catholic, and Eastern Orthodox theologians, ...

  • Makers by Nature: Letters from a Master Painter on Faith, Hope, and Art, By Bruce Herman
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    Makers by Nature

    Letters from a Master Painter on Faith, Hope, and Art

    by Bruce Herman
    Foreword by Malcolm Guite

    An Artist's Look at Theology, Art, and Philosophy

    Dear Tom,

    Thanks for writing again—and for this unusually philosophical response to my letter! In response: my theology of art is my theology. Period. I think of God as the Artist and all human artists as eternal apprentices. Consequently, all my thinking about God involves the centrality of beauty and the ...

  • Colossians and Philemon: An Introduction and Commentary, By Alan J. Thompson
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    Colossians and Philemon

    An Introduction and Commentary

    Tyndale New Testament Commentaries

    by Alan J. Thompson
    Series edited by Eckhard J. Schnabel
    Consulting Editor Nicholas Perrin

    In the letter to the Colossians, Paul points us to the sufficiency of Christ, urging readers to continue to trust in him. Because Christ is supreme over all, our hope is secure in him. Colossians also shows how the new life that believers have in Jesus is to reflect his character in everyday relationships.

    Then in the letter to Philemon, we see the difference the gospel makes ...