Für statistische Zwecke und um bestmögliche Funktionalität zu bieten, speichert diese Website Cookies auf Ihrem Gerät. Das Speichern von Cookies kann in den Browser-Einstellungen deaktiviert werden. Wenn Sie die Website weiter nutzen, stimmen Sie der Verwendung von Cookies zu.
Cookie akzeptierenJeff McSwain
Simul Sanctification
- Pickwick Publications
- 2018
- Taschenbuch
- 334 Seiten
- ISBN 9781532641077
Why do we see so much fruitful good in unbelievers and so much evil in believers? What could it mean for a believer that the old is ""gone,"" especially when it doesn't feel that way? What does it mean for humans who are simul iustus et peccator (simultaneously righteous and sinner) to be transformed in Christ and by his Spirit? We typically think of sanctification as pertaining to humans being conformed to Jesus, but what could it mean when Jesus speaks of himself as being sanctified for our sakes (John 17:19)? Jeff McSwain mines the theology of Karl Barth to engage such questions. In looking ""through the simul,"" he concludes with Barth that universal human transformation is a reality before it is a possibility, and that, despite our contradictory state, we may live Spirit-filled lives as we participate in Christ's true humanity that determines ours--a humanity which never gets old. ""In an original contribution, McSwain succeeds in demonstrating how Barth's version of the Lutheran 'simul iustus et peccator' is radicalized by its extension to the incarnate Son and thereby to the race as a whole, transferring the pattern of Chalcedonian Christology (the so-called 'two natures' doctrine) into the field of anthropology. The result is a significant recasting of our ways of thinking about numerous core doctrines, including creation, atonement and incarnation as well as redemption and fall."" --Trevor Hart, author of Regarding Karl Barth ""I have literally been waiting for years for this book--a book that explores in depth what the sanctification of Jesus Christ means for the sanctification of humanity. In this excellent, accessible, and innovative work, Jeff McSwain carefully examines how Karl Barth reappropriates the classic doctrine simul iustus et peccator while also creatively imagining ways Barth's understanding could enliven the life and ministry of the church today. This is a beautiful contribution to the growing theological literature on sanctification and discipleship."" --Kristen Deede Johnson, award winning author of The Justice Calling ""McSwain argues persuasively that the simul . . . is a powerful key to Barth's theology as a whole. Breaking new ground, yet firmly committed to all the key truths championed by Barth, McSwain's
Mehr
Weniger
zzgl. Versand
in Kürze