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William J. Abraham explores the concept of God as agent by attending to various problems in Christian doctrine including the relation of freedom and grace, divine action in liberation theology, the relationship of Christianity and Islam, the relation of the natural sciences to theology and apparent design, and the realm of the demonic.
Volume III of a tetralogy devoted to Divine Agency and Divine Action articulates a comprehensive vision of systematic theology focused on divine action from creation to eschatology.
Methodism began as renewal movement within Anglicanism in the eighteenth century, dominated the Protestant landscape of the USA in the nineteenth, and continues to be one of the most vibrant forms of Christianity worldwide today. William J Abraham traces its history, describes its particular identity and emphases, and looks to its future prospects.
This volume argues that in order to understand divine action, one must begin with the array of specific actions predicated of God in the Christian tradition.
This study lays the groundwork for a constructive contribution to the contemporary debate regarding divine action. It charts the history of debate about divine action among key Anglophone philosophers of religion, and observes that they were largely committed to this erroneous understanding of divine action as a closed concept.
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