Exploring Kenotic Christology: The Self-emptying of God

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C. Stephen Evans
Oxford University Press, 2006 - 348 pagini
This collection of essays, by a team of Christian philosophers, theologians, and biblical scholars, explores the viability of a kenotic account of the incarnation. Such an account is inspired by Paul's lyrical claims in Philippians 2:6-11 that Christ Jesus, though God in nature, 'emptied himself' or 'made himself nothing' by becoming human. The biblical support for such a view can be found throughout the four gospels and the book of Hebrews, as well as in other places. A kenotic account takes seriously the possibility that Christ, in becoming incarnate, temporarily divested himself of such properties as omnipotence, omniscience, and omnipresence. Several of the contributors argue that this view is fully orthodox, and that it has great strengths in giving us a picture of a God who is willing to become completely vulnerable for the sake of human beings, and one that is completely consistent with the very human portrait of Jesus in the New Testament. The proponents of kenotic Christology argue that the philosophical accounts of God's nature that have led to rejection of this theory ought themselves to be subjected to criticism in light of the biblical data. Some essays test the theory by raising critical questions and arguing that traditional accounts of the incarnation can achieve the goals of kenotic theories as well as kenotic theories can. The book also explores the implications of a kenotic view of the incarnation for philosophical theology in general and the doctrine of the Trinity in particular, and it concludes with essays that examine the validity of the ideal of kenosis for women, and a challenge to traditional Christology to take a kenotic theory seriously. Book jacket.

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Cuprins

Is Kenosis Orthodox?
112
A Kenotic Christological Method for Understanding
139
Trinity and Kenosis
165
Kenotic Christology and the Nature of God
190
The Depths of Gods
218
Does Kenosis Rest on a Mistake? Three Kenotic
246
The Logic of Assumption
265
Kenosis and Feminist Theory
291
The Promise of Kenosis
313
Index
337
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Despre autor (2006)

C. Stephen Evans is University Professor of Philosophy and Humanities, Baylor University.

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