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Dogmatik in der Moderne.
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Оглавление
- Cover
- Titel
- Preface
- Table of Contents
- Note on Citations
- Introduction
- 1. A First Look
- 2. Absurdity and Paradox
- 3. From a Conceptual to a Formal Approach
- 4. Three Languages of Freedom
- 5. Criticisms and Clarifications
- 6. How the Book is Organized
- First Part: Freedom as Dependence on Divine Revelation
- Chapter 1: A Void Name
- 1. Erasmus’s satis probabilis sententia
- 2. Three sententiae Become One
- 3. The Theological Paradox of God’s Freedom
- 4. Beyond Determinism
- 5. The Theological Paradox of Human Freedom
- 6. Looking at De libertate christiana
- Chapter 2: Freedom of Paradox
- 1. Petitio principii
- 2. Claritas scripturae
- 3. Scandal and Folly
- 4. Sub contrario
- 5. Assequi
- 6. Freedom to Know Paradoxically
- 7. Nova lingua
- 8. Inopia formarum
- 9. Freedom to Say “servum arbitrium”
- 10. Luther’s “Copernican Revolution”
- Chapter 3: A Theological Polyphony
- 1. Subjectivism
- 2. Transcendentalism
- 3. Ontology
- 4. Dialectics
- Chapter 4: Theology coram Deo abscondito
- 1. A First Look at De servo arbitrio
- 2. Barth
- 3. Ebeling
- 4. Jüngel
- 5. A Different Perspective
- 6. Deus absconditus as Meta-Concept
- 7. Revelation and Deus revelatus
- 8. An Attempt of Formalization
- Chapter 1: A Void Name
- Second Part: Freedom as Bond with the Divine Promise
- Chapter 5: Sollen, Sein, and Sin
- 1. “Ought” Implies “Can”
- 2. The Deontic and the Modal
- 3. Luther Negates the Implication
- 4. Divine Commandments
- 5. The Condition of Sin
- 6. The Theological Limitation of Deontic Language
- Chapter 6: Promise as Forgiveness
- 1. The Theological Meaning of Forgiveness
- 2. Promise as Origin
- 3. Sin and Forgiveness
- 4. The Realization of the Promise
- 5. Law and Gospel
- 6. Freedom to Be Responsible for God
- Chapter 7: The Complexity of Justification
- 1. Two Aspects of Justice
- 2. The Semantic Overabundance of Justification
- 3. The Overlapping of the Historical and Systematic Aspects
- 4. Justification in De servo arbitrio
- 5. Two Ways of Justification’s Unconditionality
- 6. The Process of Imputation
- 7. From absolutus to subiectus
- 8. Addressing the Historical Complexity
- 9. Addressing the Systematic Complexity
- 10. Beyond the “articulus” Complex
- Chapter 8: Luther and Kant
- 1. The “Pro/Contra” Aporia
- 2. “Pro”: Radical Evil
- 3. “Pro”: Three Conceptual Pairs
- 4. “Contra”: the “Ought Implies Can” Once Again
- 5. Engaging the Aporia
- 6. On the Human Sinful Condition
- 7. On God’s Justice and Grace
- 8. On Revelation
- 9. Overcoming the Aporia
- 10. Kant is Not a Theologian
- 11. Theology and Philosophy Conceive the Sollen Differently
- 12. Neither Reduction Nor Subordination
- Chapter 5: Sollen, Sein, and Sin
- Third Part: Freedom as Meaningful Life under Divine Election
- Chapter 9: Like Clay in the Potter’s Hands
- 1. Life and Form
- 2. Typological Language
- 3. Merit as Meaning
- 4. Necessitas immutabilitatis
- 5. The Meaning Precedes Life
- 6. Incipit vita nova
- Chapter 10: The Path Towards Salvation
- 1. Formal Rebirth
- 2. Damnation as Salvation
- 3. Paradoxical Retributive Justice
- 4. Freedom to Say Salvation
- 5. Existentialist Terminology?
- 6. Conscientia
- 7. Theology and Existence
- Chapter 11: The Function of Divine Predestination
- 1. Fidei summus gradus
- 2. Justifying God’s Retributive Justice
- 3. Potentia sub-ordinata
- 4. Predestination in De servo arbitrio
- 5. The Elected Life
- 6. No System of Predestination
- 7. Children’s Suffering and the Grand Inquisitor
- 8. Theology vs. Theodicy
- Chapter 12: Life, a Celebration of Divine Grace
- 1. Gratia
- 2. Jacob and Esau as Archetypes
- 3. Literature, Myth, and Psychology
- 4. Comparison with Theology
- 5. Luther on Jacob and Esau
- 6. “Den falschen Verräter, das mördrische Blut”
- 7. Freedom to be an Object of Grace
- 8. Living Grace, Living Freedom
- Chapter 9: Like Clay in the Potter’s Hands
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index of References
- Index of Names
- Index of Subjects
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