Christ at the Crux: The Mediation of God and Creation in Christological Perspective - eBook
Stock No: WW111655EB
Christ at the Crux: The Mediation of God and Creation in Christological Perspective - eBook  -     By: Paul Cumin

Christ at the Crux: The Mediation of God and Creation in Christological Perspective - eBook

Pickwick Publications / 2014 / ePub

In Stock
Stock No: WW111655EB

Buy Item Our Price$20.21 Retail: $28.00 Save 28% ($7.79)
In Stock
Stock No: WW111655EB
Pickwick Publications / 2014 / ePub
Add To Cart

or checkout with

Add To Wishlist
Add To Cart

or checkout with

Wishlist

Have questions about eBooks? Check out our eBook FAQs.

* This product is available for purchase worldwide.
Other Formats (2)
Select this Item Product Title/Author Availability Price Quantity
$45.00
In Stock
Our Price$45.00
Retail: $50.00
Add To Cart
$45.00
$20.21
In Stock
Our Price$20.21
Retail: $28.00
Add To Cart
Quantity for eBook0
$20.21

Product Information

Title: Christ at the Crux: The Mediation of God and Creation in Christological Perspective - eBook
By: Paul Cumin
Format: DRM Free ePub
Vendor: Pickwick Publications
Publication Date: 2014
ISBN: 9781630873332
ISBN-13: 9781630873332
Stock No: WW111655EB

Publisher's Description

How can Christian theology confess God as both other than the world and also related to it in a way that compromises neither of these? Most modern thought has offered a simple reply: it cannot. Christ at the Crux analyzes one element of the roots of this denial and charts a route toward rapprochement. The Christologies of eight theologians offer various attempts to relate the Creator and the creature in Christ: Irenaeus of Lyon, Cyril of Alexandria, John Philoponus, Martin Luther, John Calvin, John Zizioulas, Robert Jenson, and Colin Gunton. Within the patristic era the question is grounded in theology about the incarnation; with the Reformers the focus is on the mediation between creation and Creator; and with the three modern theologians the breadth of the issue is completed with theology proper. Together, these eight offer a grand-scale perspective on much of the christological possibilities for conceiving the relation between God and everything else. In the end Paul Cumin shows how the doctrine of the Trinity appears to open new possibilities for Christology and in particular for the way theology about the Spirit enables a reimagining of those items of Christian thought most likely at the roots of our modern rejection of God-as-other.

Author Bio

Paul Cumin (PhD, King's College London) is the pastor at Pemberton Community Church (British Columbia, Canada) and Adjunct Professor of Theology at the Mennonite Brethren Biblical Seminary (Canada).

Ask a Question

Author/Artist Review