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Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology, 1973
The obedience leitmotif complements the tension centered in the sacrifice and enables the good news of Isaac's salvation to stand as a reaffirmation of the patriarchal promise.
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The obedience leitmotif complements the tension centered in the sacrifice and enables the good news of Isaac's salvation to stand as a reaffirmation of the patriarchal promise.
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Faith as skill: an essay on faith in the Abrahamic tradition
Religious Studies, 2023AbstractWhat is the nature of religious faith as understood in the Abrahamic tradition? This article suggests a novel answer to this question. To this end, I first outline five desiderata, characterized by appealing to conceptions of faith in both the Islamic and Christian traditions, which I think every adequate account of faith should satisfy.
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Commonalities and Differences among the Abrahamic Faiths
Journal of Islam in Asia <span style="font-size: 0.6em">(E-ISSN: 2289-8077)</span>, 2012Abrahamic faiths namely Judaism, Christianity and Islam share the theology of monotheism. The three religions trace their origins to Prophet Abraham. Judaism is the religion of the descendents of Jacob, son of Isaac and grandson of Abraham. Christianity began as a sect of Judaism in the 1st century, and later on developed its own creed such as ...
Osman Chuah Abdullah +1 more
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1997
For Kierkegaard in the Concluding Unscientific Postscript it is ‘the God-relationship that makes a human being a human being’.1 By ‘God-relationship’ Kierkegaard does not mean the relationship that all persons have to God by virtue of being persons created by God. He means a faith-relationship, consciously entered and maintained.
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For Kierkegaard in the Concluding Unscientific Postscript it is ‘the God-relationship that makes a human being a human being’.1 By ‘God-relationship’ Kierkegaard does not mean the relationship that all persons have to God by virtue of being persons created by God. He means a faith-relationship, consciously entered and maintained.
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Abraham — Knight of Faith or Counterfeit? Abraham Figures in Kierkegaard, Derrida, and Kafka
KIERKEGAARDIANA, 2000Abraham — Knight of Faith or Counterfeit?
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