Self and salvation : being transformed
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Self and salvation : being transformed
(Cambridge studies in Christian doctrine)
Cambridge University Press, 1999
- : pbk
Available at 5 libraries
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Note
Bibliography: p. 282-288
Includes indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This eagerly awaited book by David F. Ford makes a unique and important contribution to the debate about the Christian doctrine of salvation. Using the pivotal image of the face, Professor Ford offers a constructive and contemporary account of the self being transformed. He engages with three modern thinkers (Levinas, Jungel and Ricoeur) in order to rethink and reimagine the meaning of self. Developing the concept of a worshipping self, he explores the dimensions of salvation through the lenses of scripture, worship practices, the life, death and resurrection of Christ, and the lives of contemporary saints. He uses different genres and traditions to show how the self flourishes through engagement with God, other people, and the responsibilities and joys of ordinary living. The result is a habitable theology of salvation immersed in Christian faith, thought and practice while also being deeply involved with modern life in a pluralist world.
Table of Contents
- Preface
- Part I. Dialogues: Levinas, Jungel, Ricoeur: 1. Facing
- 2. Enjoyment, responsibility and desire: a hospitable self
- 3. God, otherness and substitution
- a self without idols
- 4. Language, love and testimony: a worshipping self
- Part II. Flourishings: 5. The communication of God's abundance: a singing self
- 6. Do this: a Eucharist self
- 7. Facing Jesus Christ
- 8. The face on the cross and the worship of God
- 9. Love as vocation
- Therese of Lisieux
- 10. Polyphonic living: Dietrich Bonhoeffer
- 11. Feasting
- Bibliography.
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