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How can finite creatures know an infinite God? How does limited knowledge impact what we can say of God?Retrieving important insight from Scripture and key patristic, medieval, early modern, and modern theologians, Ronni Kurtz presents a rich analysis of the doctrine of divine incomprehensibility. Our theological language, says Kurtz, cannot capture the full mystery of God. However, our inability to see God in his totality should not lead us to despair. Through God's gracious accommodation, we can learn to speak of God faithfully, truthfully, and prayerfully.Kurtz's retrieval of the tradition to unpack divine accommodation reminds us that theologians in all ages have wrestled with what we can and cannot say of God.
How does Godâ¿s unchanging nature impact the salvation of his people?While divine immutability enjoyed a broad affirmation through much of Christian theological antiquity, it has fallen on harder times in modernity. Seen as a holdover from overly philosophical theology, divine immutability has often been characterized as rendering God static and incapable of having meaningful relationships with his creation. Â This book aims to swim upstream from this claim and demonstrate that divine immutability does not handicap soteriology but is a necessary and vital component of Godâ¿s economy of redemption as triune changelessness protects and promotes the redemption of Godâ¿s creatures. By anchoring the economy of redemption in divine immutability, we see the benefit of rooting all of Godâ¿s economic work in the immanent life of God. This book aims to be a work of dogmatic theology and therefore will arrive at this thesis by way of exegetical, historical, and philosophical theology. In harmony, these fields will interact with varying deviations and denials of divine immutability and ultimately conclude that a classical articulation of Godâ¿s changelessness does most justice to the economy of redemption.
In a world where theologians often seem harsh and divisive, Ronni Kurtz shows how true Christian theology--the contemplation of God--leads to the cultivation of the fruit of the Spirit.
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