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Colin Gunton's Trinitarian Theology of Culture: Towards a Living Sacrifice Praise
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Colin Gunton's Trinitarian Theology of Culture: Towards a Living Sacrifice Praise
Current price: $115.00
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Barnes and Noble
Colin Gunton's Trinitarian Theology of Culture: Towards a Living Sacrifice Praise
Current price: $115.00
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Size: Hardcover
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Whilst upholding some of the criticisms of Colin Gunton's work, this incisive book argues that there is a
Hauptbriefe
in Gunton reception that assumes his early classic works,
The One, the Three and the Many
and
The Promise of Trinitarian Theology
(1st ed), are definitive of his project and fail to engage adequately with the progressions in Gunton's later thought
. Instead, this book offers a fresh reading of Gunton by giving greater prominence to his later writings, which are centred in the mediation of the Son and the Spirit in creation.
Andrew Picard argues that Gunton's trinitarian theology of culture emerges from his later trinitarian theology of mediation, creation, Christology, pneumatology, and ecclesiology. Exploring these doctrinal
foci
enables an understanding of Gunton's account of faithful human culture as embodied worship; a living sacrifice of praise which contributes to the divine redemption and perfection of creation. It is the church's particular calling to embody such praise through its visible life in community. The study concludes by intersecting Gunton's theology with the social sciences to critique ableism and consider the politics of the church's belonging in community.
Hauptbriefe
in Gunton reception that assumes his early classic works,
The One, the Three and the Many
and
The Promise of Trinitarian Theology
(1st ed), are definitive of his project and fail to engage adequately with the progressions in Gunton's later thought
. Instead, this book offers a fresh reading of Gunton by giving greater prominence to his later writings, which are centred in the mediation of the Son and the Spirit in creation.
Andrew Picard argues that Gunton's trinitarian theology of culture emerges from his later trinitarian theology of mediation, creation, Christology, pneumatology, and ecclesiology. Exploring these doctrinal
foci
enables an understanding of Gunton's account of faithful human culture as embodied worship; a living sacrifice of praise which contributes to the divine redemption and perfection of creation. It is the church's particular calling to embody such praise through its visible life in community. The study concludes by intersecting Gunton's theology with the social sciences to critique ableism and consider the politics of the church's belonging in community.