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Second Thoughts about Theologies of Hope
Evangelical Quarterly: An International Review of Bible and Theology, 2000Christian eschatological hope is capable of surviving the criticisms of Marxists and cosmologists and retains its traditional position as an essential part of systematic theology. Hegel’s understanding of the relation of the End to the Beginning is erroneous. The God of hope must be understood in trinitarian terms as a God who has a life and a history.
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The Principle and Theology of Hope
Scottish Journal of Theology, 1968In the introduction to his helpful edition of selected writings from Ernst Bloch, Hans Heinz Holz recognises that Christian theologians feel themselves drawn towards Bloch's philosophy, and have in fact ‘appropriated it (and obviously also his person, as theFestschriftfor his eightieth birthday shows)’.
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An Asian American Theology of Hope
2015In North America, one’s “Asianness” signifies to the white dominant group that he or she is a foreigner and consequently a second-class citizen. Asian American women have been perceived as perpetual foreigners. The understanding of the foreigner within the book of Ezra brings to light how foreign women were treated, excluded, and forced to move away ...
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The Psychology and Theology of Hope
2021In this study, the book “The Psychology and Teology of Hope” which is written by Saffet Kartopu is examined. It is published by Eskiyeni Publishing House in 2021. The book inclueds an introduction, five chapters and a conclusion. It is written in Turkish and it has got a fluently languae.The book examines man and religion Otto Rank's concept of ...
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Technological Utopia and the Theology of Hope
Theology Today, 1970Man responsibly engages in technologic or cybernetic mastery of the environment as he acknowledges that his life is situated in the creative action of God, as he recognizes the fact that his ingenuity is rooted in his createdness Imago Dei, as he perceives that world order and change are dynamically given by the perpetual impulse of the divine Spirit …
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Ecclesiological Developments in Moltmann's Theology of Hope
Theological Studies, 1973JURGEN MOLTMANN has become a figure of international prominence in the world of theology as a result of the major statement of his thought, the Theology of Hope, which first appeared in 1964. Since then, Moltmann himself, as well as many others, have not ceased to marvel at the impact the work has made, not only in the United States and Europe, but in ...
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Moltmann's Theology of Hope Revisited
Scottish Journal of Theology, 1989Jürgen Moltmann's first major work, Theology of Hope, first published in 1964, is arguably one of the truly great theological works of the last few decades, and indisputably one of the most influential. Though Moltmann's own theology has developed considerably in many subsequent works since Theology of Hope, it remains one of his greatest achievements,
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The Apologetic Force of a Theology of Hope
Scottish Journal of Theology, 1980Martin Marty and Dean Peerman in their New Theology series attempt to present the most significant recent theological trends. Volume 5, published in 1968, was devoted to the theology of hope. In the period from about 1967 to 1973 the word ‘hope’ appeared in the titles of numerous books to be found in theological bookstores and hope was the subject of ...
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