Divine Complexity: The Rise of Creedal Christianity
Stock No: WW696691
Divine Complexity: The Rise of Creedal Christianity  -     By: Paul Hinlicky

Divine Complexity: The Rise of Creedal Christianity

Augsburg Fortress / 2011 / Paperback

In Stock
Stock No: WW696691

Buy Item Our Price$40.00
In Stock
Quantity:
Stock No: WW696691
Augsburg Fortress / 2011 / Paperback
Quantity:

Add To Cart

or checkout with

Add To Wishlist
Quantity:


Add To Cart

or checkout with

Wishlist

Product Close-up
Please allow an additional 4 business days before your product ships due to temporary delays. Thank you for your patience.
* This product is available for shipment only to the USA.

Product Information

Title: Divine Complexity: The Rise of Creedal Christianity
By: Paul Hinlicky
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 304
Vendor: Augsburg Fortress
Publication Date: 2011
Dimensions: 9 X 6 (inches)
Weight: 1 pound 1 ounce
ISBN: 0800696697
ISBN-13: 9780800696696
Stock No: WW696691

Publisher's Description

Paul Hinlicky reads the history of the early church as a genuine, centurieslong theological struggle to make sense of the confession of Jesus' life, death, and resurrection. Protesting a recent parting of the ways between systematic theology and the history of early Christianity, Hinlicky relies on the insights of historical criticism to argue in this historical survey for the coherence of doctrinal development in the early church. Hinlicky contends that the Christian tradition shows evidence of being governed by a hermeneutic of "cross and resurrection." In successive chapters he finds in the New Testament writings a collective Christological decision against docetism; in the union of Old and New Testaments, a monotheistic decision against Gnostic dualism; in the resulting sweep of the canon a narrative of the divine economy of salvation that posed a trinitarian alternative to Arian Unitarianism; and in the insistence upon the cross of the incarnate Son, a rebuke of Nestorianism.

This book is written with the student of early Christianity and the development of doctrine in mind.

Author Bio

Paul R. Hinlicky is Tice Professor of Lutheran Studies at Roanoke College in Virginia.

Ask a Question

Author/Artist Review