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OverviewThe concept of the 'social Trinity', which posits three conscious subjects in God, radically revised the traditional Christian idea of the Creator. It promoted a view of God as a passionate, creative and responsive source of all being. Keith Ward argues that social Trinitarian thinking threatens the unity of God, however, and that this new view of God does not require a 'social' component. Expanding on the work of theologians such as Barth and Rahner, who insisted that there was only one mind of God, Ward offers a coherent, wholly monotheistic interpretation of the Trinity. Christ and the Cosmos analyses theistic belief in a scientific context, demonstrating the necessity of cosmology to theological thinking that is often overly myopic and anthropomorphic. This important volume will benefit those who seek to understand what the Trinity is, why it matters and how it fits into a scientific account of the universe. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Keith Ward (Heythrop College, University of London)Publisher: Cambridge University Press Imprint: Cambridge University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.70cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.530kg ISBN: 9781107112360ISBN 10: 1107112362 Pages: 280 Publication Date: 06 August 2015 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsPart I. The Threefold Nature of the Divine Being: 1. Introduction: talking about the Trinity; 2. Why we may need to restate the ways in which we talk about the Trinity; 3. The doctrine of divine simplicity; 4. Cosmological and axiological explanation; 5. Divine potentiality and temporality; Part II. The Biblical Sources of Trinitarian Thought: 6. Three centres of consciousness?; 7. The synoptic Gospels; 8. John's Gospel; 9. The Trinity in the Epistles; 10. The idea of incarnation; Part III. The Trinity, Immanent and Economic: 11. Why three?; 12. Trinity and revelation; 13. Hegel and modern theology; 14. The immanent Trinity; 15. The identity of the immanent and the economic Trinity; 16. Hegel again; 17. What creation adds to the Trinity; 18. The epistemic priority of the economic Trinity; 19. The Trinity and naive realism; 20. The Trinity and the cosmos; 21. Revelation and the immanent Trinity; Part IV. The Social Trinity: 22. Persons and substances; 23. The idea of a personal and free creation; 24. The logical uniqueness of persons; 25. The divine nature and freedom; 26. Freedom in God and in creatures; 27. Persons as necessarily relational; 28. An ontology of the personal?; 29. Intra-Trinitarian love; 30. Infinite goods; 31. Divine love and necessity; 32. Love and alterity; 33. Trinity versus Monotheism; 34. The passion of Christ; 35. God and abandonment; Part V. The Cosmic Trinity: 36. The doctrine of perichoresis; 37. The convergence of social and unipersonal models of the Trinity; 38. Life-streams and persons; 39. Modalism and necessity; 40. The cosmic Trinity.ReviewsAuthor InformationKeith Ward is Professorial Research Fellow at Heythrop College, University of London and Fellow of the British Academy. He was formerly Regius Professor of Divinity and a Canon of Christ Church at the University of Oxford. His numerous publications include The Evidence for God: The Case for the Existence of the Spiritual Dimension, Morality, Autonomy, and God and the five-volume Comparative Theology. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |