Journal•ISSN: 1463-1652
International Journal of Systematic Theology
Wiley
About: International Journal of Systematic Theology is an academic journal published by Wiley. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Doctrine & Computer science. It has an ISSN identifier of 1463-1652. Over the lifetime, 516 publications have been published receiving 1910 citations. The journal is also known as: IJST.
Topics: Doctrine, Computer science, Citation, Christology, Christian theology
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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44 citations
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TL;DR: Wright, N.T. as mentioned in this paper, The Resurrection of the Son of God. London: SPCK, 2003, xi + 817pp. £55.00 hb., £35.00 pb.
Abstract: A Review Article on N.T. Wright, The Resurrection of the Son of God. London: SPCK, 2003, xi + 817pp. £55.00 hb., £35.00 pb.
38 citations
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TL;DR: The authors argued that Bultmann's concept of faith as self-understanding undermines the reality of God and reduces theology to anthropology, and argued that the locus of all true knowledge of God is the living Christological event of divine-human encounter in which God is both related to and differentiated from humanity.
Abstract: The tradition of post-Barthian systematic theology has consistently criticized Rudolf Bultmann's doctrine of faith. Following Barth's critique, contemporary theologians have argued that Bultmann's concept of faith as self-understanding undermines the reality of God and reduces theology to anthropology. This article argues that such arguments rest on a misreading of Bultmann. Far from anthropologizing theological knowledge, Bultmann identifies faith with self-understanding precisely in order to maintain the distinctiveness of God's reality. According to Bultmann, the locus of all true knowledge of God is the living christological event of divine–human encounter in which God is both related to and differentiated from humanity. This conception of God and faith remains relevant, and it offers valuable resources to theological reflection today.
27 citations
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26 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, an analysis of the concept of "a practice" is presented, and resources from Thomas Aquinas are offered that might help the development of ecclesiology in this vein.
Abstract: Recent writing in ecclesiology has often focused on church practices and less on dogmatic accounts. Whilst welcoming this renewed awareness, there are problems in its development, demonstrated here through an analysis of the concept of ‘a practice’, and through readings of two examples of this tendency: Hutter's Suffering Divine Things and Hauerwas's With the Grain of the Universe. Resources from Thomas Aquinas are offered that might help the development of ecclesiology in this vein.
23 citations