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Beschreibung
"Did Christ assume a fallen human nature. "What is not assumed is not healed. " So goes the Chalcedonian maxim articulated by Gregory of Nazianzus regarding the nature and extent of Christ's work in assuming a human nature. But what is the nature of that assumption. If Christ is to stand in solidarity with us, must he have assumed not merely a human nature, but specifically a fallen human nature. In Sinless Flesh: A Critique of Karl Barth's Fallen Christ, Rafael Bello argues against the assertion made by Karl Barth, T. F. Torrance, and those who follow them that Christ assumed a fallen nature. Through retrieval of patristic, medieval, and Reformed orthodox theologians, Bello argues that a proper understanding of human nature, trinitarian inseparable operations, and the habitual grace-grace of union distinction leads to the conclusion that the assertion that Christ assumed a fallen human nature is at odds with faithful theological and historical understandings of the incarnation. Readers interested in theological retrieval for issues in contemporary theology will find a faithful model and way forward for a thorny issue in modern dogmatics"-
Spezifikationen
Sprache
- Englisch
Autor
- Rafael Nogueira Bello
Erscheinungsjahr
- 2020
Format
- Buch (Softcover)
Anzahl Seiten
- 152
