Christian Philosophy of Religion: Essays in Honor of Stephen T. Davis
English
Christian Philosophy of Religion celebrates the work and influence of Stephen T. Davis over the past four decades in philosophy of religion, philosophical theology, and biblical studies. Daviss work is characterized by the application of formal tools of philosophy for the understanding and articulation of Christian doctrine. His emphasis on argumentative clarity and logical rigor is reflected in the contributions by the sixteen internationally recognized scholars of Christian philosophical theology whose work is gathered here.
The volume addresses four areas of Christian thought. Contributors to the first sectionDoctrine and Christian Beliefexamine the Christian doctrines of the Redemption, the Incarnation, and the Resurrection. Those in the second sectionThe Nature of God and Christian Beliefprobe the Christian belief that God is a trinity of persons, simple, immutable, self-sufficient, and independent of all things. In the third sectionReason and Christian Beliefcontributors examine, in different ways, the role that reason, evidence, and argument plays in the formation of Christian belief. Essays in the fourth and final sectionScripture, Theology, and Christian Beliefaddress the relation between scripture and the problem of divine hiddenness, the problem of scriptural authority, and the relation between philosophical theology and fundamental theology. This diverse and wide-ranging collection will be of serious interest to anyone studying or working in the philosophy of religion, theology, scripture studies, or religious studies.
Contributors: Kelly James Clark, William Lane Craig, C. Stephen Evans, William Hasker, John Hick, Brian Leftow, Anselm K. Min, Gerald O'Collins, SJ, Alan G. Padgett, Alvin Plantinga, C. P. Ruloff, Marguerite Shuster, Eleonore Stump, Richard Swinburne, Charles Taliaferro, Dale Tuggy, Linda Zagzebski.
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