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Covenant and eschatology : the divine drama / Michael S. Horton.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Louisville, Ky. : Westminster John Knox Press, c2002.Edition: 1st edDescription: 351 p. ; 23 cmISBN:
  • 0664225012 (alk. paper)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 230 21
LOC classification:
  • BR 118 .H65 2002
Contents:
Contents:
A God who acts? -- Accounting for divine action -- All the world's a stage -- Divine rhetoric -- Interpreting for divine discourse -- Implications of a covenantal hermeneutic -- Reintegrating the rhetoric of redemption -- Community theater.
Summary: Summary:Summary: In this innovative work in theological method and hermeneutics, Michael S. Horton uses the motif of the covenant as a way of binding together God's "word" and God's "act." Seeking an integration of theological method with the content of Christian theology, Horton emphasizes God's covenant as God's way of working for redemption in the world. Horton maintains a substantial dialogue with important philosophical figures and Christian theologians, ultimately providing scholars and serious students a significant model for approaching and understanding Christian theology. Operating from the conviction that the content of theology should shape and determine the method for doing theology, Michael S. Horton proposes a redemptive-historical method, an analogical mode, a dramatic model, and the covenant context for reintegrating the discipline of theology. Drawing on the metaphor of performance, Horton brings together theory and praxis. He dialogues constructively with Protestant scholasticism as well as with contemporary speech-act theory, hermeneutics, and postmodern thought, ultimately providing scholars and students with a significant proposal for integrating biblical and systematic theology.
Item type: Books
Holdings
Current library Collection Call number Vol info Status Date due Barcode
Judith Thomas Library General Stacks Books BR 118 .H65 2002 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) AUA014215 Available AUA014215

Includes bibliographical references (p. [277]-328) and indexes.

Contents:

A God who acts? --
Accounting for divine action --
All the world's a stage --
Divine rhetoric --
Interpreting for divine discourse --
Implications of a covenantal hermeneutic --
Reintegrating the rhetoric of redemption --
Community theater.

Summary:


In this innovative work in theological method and hermeneutics, Michael S. Horton uses the motif of the covenant as a way of binding together God's "word" and God's "act." Seeking an integration of theological method with the content of Christian theology, Horton emphasizes God's covenant as God's way of working for redemption in the world. Horton maintains a substantial dialogue with important philosophical figures and Christian theologians, ultimately providing scholars and serious students a significant model for approaching and understanding Christian theology. Operating from the conviction that the content of theology should shape and determine the method for doing theology, Michael S. Horton proposes a redemptive-historical method, an analogical mode, a dramatic model, and the covenant context for reintegrating the discipline of theology. Drawing on the metaphor of performance, Horton brings together theory and praxis. He dialogues constructively with Protestant scholasticism as well as with contemporary speech-act theory, hermeneutics, and postmodern thought, ultimately providing scholars and students with a significant proposal for integrating biblical and systematic theology.