Trinity and Martin Luther.
Annotation
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Lexham Press,
2017.
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Colección: | Studies in Historical and Systematic Theology Ser.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Intro
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Contents
- Preface to the New Edition
- Select Bibliography of Recent Literature on the Trinity in the Middle Ages and Early Modernity
- The Trinity in Medieval Philosophy
- Luther and the Trinity
- Luther and the Middle Ages
- Handbooks on the Trinity
- Foreword to the Original Edition
- Preface to the Original Edition
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Chapter 1: Introduction
- Aim of the Study
- Review of Literature
- Observations on the Recent History of Luther Scholarship
- Testing Three Approaches: The Historical-Genetic, the Systematic-Theological, and the Hermeneutical Approaches
- Introducing the Study's Approach
- The Relationship between Genre, Language, and the Trinity
- Promissio and Narrative
- The Three Chapters: The Three Genres
- Chapter 2: Luther's Understanding of the Trinity in the Doctoral Disputation of Georg Major and Johannes Faber (Dec. 12, 1544)
- The Disputation
- Luther and the Disputation
- The Doctoral Disputation
- The Regions of Academic Inquiry and the Disputation
- The Inner Trinity as the Subject Matter of the Disputation
- The Attacks on the Trinity in Luther's Later Years
- Infinity and the Inner Trinity
- The Inner Trinity and the Discourse of Infinity
- The "Improper" Language of the Spirit
- Tense, Modality, and the Eternal Generation of the Son
- The Infinity of the Inner Trinity: Conclusion
- Luther and Aristotle on the Divine Infinity
- The Actual Infinity
- The Potential Infinity
- Natural Philosophy and the Generation of the Son
- The Inner Trinity and the Analogy
- The Divine Infinity: Conclusion
- The Inner Trinity
- The Inner-Trinitarian Proposition
- The Scotus-Ockham Trajectory: The Metaphysical Claim of the Inner-Trinitarian res
- The Semantics of the Inner-Trinitarian Proposition
- The Logic of the totus and solus.
- The Inner-Trinitarian Proposition: Conclusion
- Conclusion
- Chapter 3: Luther's Understanding of the Trinity in the Hymn, "Now Rejoice, Dear Christians" (1523)
- Luther and the Hymn
- Text and Melody
- The Genre of the Hymn
- The Holy Spirit
- The Joyous Advent of the Spirit
- End at the Beginning: The promissio
- The Divine Pleasure in Creation
- The Third Person of the Trinity: Conclusion
- The Divine Silence
- The Law-Gospel Relation and the Doctrine of God
- The Hymn of Praise and the Divine Silence
- The "I" in Captivity to the Unholy Trinity
- The Plot of "Before" and "After" as a Function of Genre
- The Pneumatological Conversion of Silence into Speech
- The Christological Transformation of Silence into Speech
- The Christological Mediation of the Penitential Psalms
- The Christological Mediation of the Lament
- Trinitarian Speech and Silence: Conclusion
- The Inner-Trinitarian Turn and the Outer-Trinitarian Advent
- The Inner-Trinitarian Essence: The Divine Passion and Mercy
- The Inner-Trinitarian Speech of the Father
- The Outer and Inner Trinity: The Advent of Christ
- Trinitarian Narrative as Interpretation of Dogma
- Conclusion
- Chapter 4: Luther's Understanding of the Trinity in the Two Sermons on Romans 11:33-36 Preached on Trinity Sunday (May 27, 1537) and the First Sunday after Trinity (June 3, 1537)
- Luther and the Sermon
- The Sermon as "Word-Event" in Contemporary Luther Scholarship
- The Dogmatic Narrowing as an Implication of the Word-Event Approach to Luther's Sermons
- Knowledge of God in Luther's Sermons on the Trinity
- Knowledge of the Triune God: Conclusion
- The Holy Spirit
- The Spirit: God Speaks from God
- The Homiletical Disputation: Knowledge of God from the "Outside-in" or the "Inside-out"?
- The Homiletical Word and the Narrativity of Incorporation.
- The Holy Spirit: Conclusion
- The Inner and Outer Trinity
- The Cross as the Eternal Sermon of the Father
- The Sites of Mutual Revelation
- The Hidden God (Deus Absconditus) in the Narrative of Trinitarian Revelation
- The Inner and Outer Trinity: Conclusion
- The Glorification of the Triune God in Creation
- The Trinitarian Structure of Revelation in Creation
- Doxology as Eschatological Impulse
- Conclusion
- Chapter 5: Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Names Index
- Scripture Index
- Old Testament
- New Testament.