(I am really, really, really enjoying his new book, Jesus von Nazareth, and will write more about this later)
Monday, April 23, 2007
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(I am really, really, really enjoying his new book, Jesus von Nazareth, and will write more about this later)
Christ Sein, Küng
Existiert Gott?, Küng
Der Anfang aller Dinge, Küng
Colossians Remixed: Subverting the Empire, Brian J. Walsh and Sylvia C. Keesmaat
The Character of Theology: An Introduction to Its Nature, Task, and Purpose, John R. Franke
Shadow Sides. God in the Old Testament, Eric Peels
The Jesus Creed, Scot McKnight
Gebete des Lebens, Karl Rahner
Jesus and the Victory of God, N.T. Wright
Universal Salvation? The Current Debite, ed. by Robin Parry and C. H. Partridge
4 comments:
Thanks for the link!
If you're really hooked you might also enjoy this article by Scott Hahn, which was delivered at Baylor University last summer:
The Authority of Mystery: The Biblical Theology of Benedict XVI
http://www.salvationhistory.com/library/scripture/AcademicArticles.cfm
Jeremy Priest -- Detroit, MI USA
Sorry, I couldn't resist pulling this off Singing In The Reign, just in case you didn't catch it since it clearly illustrates Benedict's hermeneutic of faith: from Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, Behold the Pierced One: An Approach to a Spiritual Christology (G. Harrison, trans.; San Francisco: Ignatius, 1986 [1984]), 44-5:
"From a purely scientific point of view, the legitimacy of an interpretation depends on its power to explain things. In other words, the less it needs to interfere with the sources, the more it respects the corpus as given and is able to show it to be intelligible from within, by its own logic, the more apposite such an interpretation is. Conversely, the more it interferes with the sources, the more it feels obliged to excise and throw doubt on things found there, the more alien to the subject it is. To that extent, its explanatory power is also its ability to maintain the inner unity of the corpus in question. It involves the ability to unify, to achieve a synthesis, which is the reverse of superficial harmonization. Indeed, only faith’s hermeneutic is sufficient to measure up to these criteria."
Jeremy Priest -- Detroit, MI USA
Jeremy, thanks for the helpful citation! Unfortunately, the link doesn't work, perhaps you could paste it in again and simply divide it into two?
Thanks again.
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