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  • Sovereignty of God Debate

Sovereignty of God Debate

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How is God sovereign with respect to creation? Does creation affect God? Does God suffer or change because of creation? If so, how is this related to Christology? Why have these questions been so controversial in evangelical theology, even costing some people their jobs? This book is a collection of lectures given to the Forum for Evangelical Theology at Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary. Six theologians answer the questions above from a variety of perspectives. They draw on resources including the church fathers, Thomas Aquinas, John Calvin, Jürgen Moltmann, process theology, and open theism. In the process of answering the question, "Does God suffer?" each theologian also illustrates how responding to this subject requires an examination of other crucial evangelical issues, such as how we read Scripture and what it means to proclaim that God is love. Although the writers answer these questions in a variety of ways, the hope is that engaging in this conversation together can help evangelicals and all Christians to speak more faithfully of our sovereign God. The Editors: D. Stephen Long is Professor of Systematic Theology at Marquette University. His most recent publications include 'Theology and Culture', 'Calculated Futures', 'John Wesley's Moral Theology: the Quest for God and Goodness', and 'Speaking of God: Theology, Language and Truth' (forthcoming). George Kalantzis is Associate Professor of Theology at Wheaton College. His recent books include 'Theodore of Mopsuestia: Commentary on the Gospel of John' (Early Christian Studies 7) and the forthcoming coedited volume, 'If These Stones Could Speak: Texts and Contexts'. "Dante may have located the debate between divine sovereignty and human freedom in one of the circles of hell, but reading these sprightly and well-argued essays was, by contrast, a real pleasure. In an age where divine suffering is considered the 'new orthodoxy', it is most refreshing to hear what six theologians have to say about divine sovereignty. The main theistic positions - classical, open, process - all have able representatives as their champions, and the inclusion of responses allows the authors to do more than talk past one another. This book lives up to its title." -¿Kevin J. Vanhoozer, Research Professor of Systematic Theology, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School
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