The Self-Donation of God: A Contemporary Lutheran approach to Christ and His Benefits - eBook
Stock No: WW110561EB
The Self-Donation of God: A Contemporary Lutheran approach to Christ and His Benefits - eBook  -     By: Jack D. Kilcrease

The Self-Donation of God: A Contemporary Lutheran approach to Christ and His Benefits - eBook

Wipf and Stock / 2013 / ePub

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Stock No: WW110561EB

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Product Information

Title: The Self-Donation of God: A Contemporary Lutheran approach to Christ and His Benefits - eBook
By: Jack D. Kilcrease
Format: DRM Free ePub
Vendor: Wipf and Stock
Publication Date: 2013
ISBN: 9781621896081
ISBN-13: 9781621896081
Stock No: WW110561EB

Publisher's Description

In The Self-Donation of God, Jack Kilcrease argues that the speech-act of promise is always an act of self-donation. A person who unilaterally promises to another is bound to take a particular series of actions to fulfill that promise. Being that creation is grounded in God's promising speech, the divine-human relationship is fundamentally one of divine self-donation and human receptivity. Sin disrupts this relationship and therefore redemption is constituted by a reassertion of divine promise of salvation in the face of the condemnation of the law (Gen 3:15). As a new and effective word of grace, the promise of a savior begins the process of redemption within which God speaks forth a new narrative of creation. In this new narrative, God gives himself in an even deeper manner to humanity. By donating himself through a promise, first to the protological humanity and then to Israel, he binds himself to them. At the end of this history of self-binding, God in Christ enters into the condemnation of the law, neutralizes it in the cross, and brings about a new creation through his omnipotent word of promise actualized in the resurrection.

Author Bio

Jack Kilcrease (PhD Marquette University) is a layperson in the Lutheran Church--Missouri Synod. He currently serves as an adjunct professor at Aquinas College and the Institute for Lutheran Theology.

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