|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewAccording to the Apostle Paul, what can be known about God--and by extension, about ethics--is plain to people, so we are ""without excuse."" Romans 1:18-21 teaches that we will be ""without excuse"" when God confronts us for whatever beliefs and actions seemed good to us on the day, but weren't. In our time, this notion has come to seem at least unpalatable, and more likely unbelievable. Michael D. Russell's book is an extended meditation on the possibilities in this Pauline statement and a concerted effort to enable us to understand and accept it. Situated in Reformed Protestant discussion of this matter, he offers some clarifying proposals. Maintaining all the while that whoever we are we are indeed without excuse, Michael proposes how to understand that conclusion without accepting some of the usual routes to it. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Michael D Russell , Andrew CameronPublisher: Wipf & Stock Publishers Imprint: Wipf & Stock Publishers Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.70cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.191kg ISBN: 9781725275911ISBN 10: 1725275910 Pages: 132 Publication Date: 31 July 2020 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback 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 ContentsReviews"""Michael's first book is a much-needed addition to the resource kit for modern apologetic cultural engagement. He blends clear exegesis, historical theology, and contemporary application with profound insight. It will be a wonderful blessing for all who seek to proclaim 'Christ crucified' to a world that has no hope."" --Geoff Lin, SA/NT Regional Director, Australian Fellowship of Evangelical Students ""Michael Russell's book is a valuable resource for any thoughtful Christian believer seeking to engage in apologetics and evangelism. By clear and careful argumentation, and drawing on a variety of disciplines, Russell demonstrates the plausibility of the view that all humans are morally accountable to God, in a way that both upholds the integrity of the Christian Scriptures and respects the empirical testimony of those with whom we are seeking to engage."" --Lionel J. Windsor, New Testament Lecturer, Moore College, Sydney, Australia ""Straddling the disciplines of apologetics, Pauline exegesis, ethics, systematic and practical theology, Russell effectively argues that God's moral truth 'presses in' upon us all. Object Relations theory supplies an effective device to explain how this can be and at the same time be beyond the capacity of the non-believer to articulate. This work brings a fresh defense of a form of intuitionism through which both moral culpability and imprecise knowing of God's law have their place."" --Jeffrey Pugh, former Postgraduate Dean and Research Director, Melbourne School of Theology" Michael's first book is a much-needed addition to the resource kit for modern apologetic cultural engagement. He blends clear exegesis, historical theology, and contemporary application with profound insight. It will be a wonderful blessing for all who seek to proclaim 'Christ crucified' to a world that has no hope. --Geoff Lin, SA/NT Regional Director, Australian Fellowship of Evangelical Students Michael Russell's book is a valuable resource for any thoughtful Christian believer seeking to engage in apologetics and evangelism. By clear and careful argumentation, and drawing on a variety of disciplines, Russell demonstrates the plausibility of the view that all humans are morally accountable to God, in a way that both upholds the integrity of the Christian Scriptures and respects the empirical testimony of those with whom we are seeking to engage. --Lionel J. Windsor, New Testament Lecturer, Moore College, Sydney, Australia Straddling the disciplines of apologetics, Pauline exegesis, ethics, systematic and practical theology, Russell effectively argues that God's moral truth 'presses in' upon us all. Object Relations theory supplies an effective device to explain how this can be and at the same time be beyond the capacity of the non-believer to articulate. This work brings a fresh defense of a form of intuitionism through which both moral culpability and imprecise knowing of God's law have their place. --Jeffrey Pugh, former Postgraduate Dean and Research Director, Melbourne School of Theology Author InformationMichael D. Russell is senior minister of St. George's Anglican Church, Magill, and campus director for the Australian Fellowship of Evangelical Students at the University of South Australia, Magill Campus, Adelaide. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |