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Religion - Hallman, Joseph. The Coming of the Impassible God: Tracing a Dilemma in Christian Theology  

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Buy this book together with Commentary of Theodore of Mopsuestia on the Nicene Creed by Alphonse Mingana
This book describes the development of the Christian understanding of God from the second to the eighth century as witnessed by major theologians who gradually realized that the Incarnate Word made flesh was not the God of the philosophers. They helped construct the great dogmas of the Christological councils. Beginning with the Apologists and ending with Maximus Confessor, the theological tradition overcame the notion of impassible deity in favor of the humble God of Christian faith, the Word made flesh.+The Commentary of Theodore of Mopsuestia on the Nicene Creed is an important document of an instrumental age in the development of Christianity. Theodore (c. 350-428) was clearly the most important biblical scholar of his age. While his theology eventually led to his loss of favor among some branches of the church, Theodore was at least partially responsible for three church councils held to deal with his ideas, including those of Ephesus and Chalcedon. Mingana has published here, as Woodbrooke Studies 5, for the first time a document that had previously been lost and which contains Theodore’s observations on the outcome of the Council of Nicaea, the Nicene Creed.Save $36.98
Total List Price: $246.50
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Commentary of Theodore of Mopsuestia on the Nicene Creed by Alphonse Mingana
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Hallman, Joseph. The Coming of the Impassible God: Tracing a Dilemma in Christian Theology  

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Title:The Coming of the Impassible God: Tracing a Dilemma in Christian Theology
Series:Gorgias Studies in Philosophy and Theology 1
Availability:In Print
Publisher:Gorgias Press

By Joseph  Hallman
ISBN:978-1-59333-792-6
Availability:In Print
Publication Date:11/2007
Format:Hardback, Black, 6 x 9 in
Pages:224
 

This book tells a theological story about the development of the Christian understanding of God from the second to the eighth century as witnessed by major theologians of the Christian tradition. Philosophers held that God could not change or suffer. Christian apologists in the second and third century defended belief in the Incarnation against philosophers with whom they shared a similar view of the divine being. Because of the astonishing insight of Athanasius in the fourth century, a shift occurred: unless Christ is divine we cannot be saved! The council of Nicea dogmatized this view. Another great Alexandrian, Cyril, argued that the Word made flesh truly experienced all things human, including suffering on the Cross. Because of the early influence of Platonism in Christian theology, these insights created a theological dilemma for the Fathers captured in various Christological heresies. Since the divine by nature cannot suffer, how are we to conceive of the Incarnation? Can the Son of God truly suffer? Can a suffering Logos be fully divine? In the West Tertulllian, then Augustine later raised similar questions. For Augustine, Christians believe in a deus humilis, a humble God unknown to philosophers. The story is finally brought to a resounding conclusion in the work of Maximus the Confessor who is the last and greatest patristic Christological writer. By carefully constructing an apophatic theology of Christ Maximus refutes the final Christological heresies and resolves the dilemma of divine suffering.

Joseph M. Hallman is an Emeritus Professor of Theology at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Mn. He holds degrees from Marquette and Fordham Universities, and has written extensively on the Christology of the Fathers, especially on the question of divine suffering.




Hallman, Joseph. The Coming of the Impassible God: Tracing a Dilemma in Christian Theology
ISBN:978-1-59333-792-6
Weight:1 LBS.
Price:$109.00

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