The debate of the relationship of God to suffering and the conceivability of a suffering God has become more urgent with impact of human suffering in the 20th and 21st centuries. Schaab proposes that the key is recognition that the triune Christian Gods intimate relationship to creation, and expands Peacockes evolutionary theology.
The debate of the relationship of God to suffering and the conceivability of a suffering God has become more urgent with impact of human suffering in the 20th and 21st centuries. Schaab proposes that the key is recognition that the triune Christian Gods intimate relationship to creation, and expands Peacockes evolutionary theology.
Assistant Professor of Systematic Theology and Associate Dean for General Education, College of Arts and Sciences, Barry University
Inhaltsangabe
Foreword by Arthur R. Peacocke Abbreviations Introduction 1. God in a Suffering Cosmos 2. Scientific Foundations of an Evolutionary Theology 3. Knowing and Naming in Theology and Science 4. Divine Being and Becoming 5. Evolution and Divine Suffering 6. Feminist, Ecological, and Pastoral Explorations Conclusion: Speaking Rightly of God? Notes Bibliography Index
Foreword by Arthur R. Peacocke Abbreviations Introduction 1. God in a Suffering Cosmos 2. Scientific Foundations of an Evolutionary Theology 3. Knowing and Naming in Theology and Science 4. Divine Being and Becoming 5. Evolution and Divine Suffering 6. Feminist, Ecological, and Pastoral Explorations Conclusion: Speaking Rightly of God? Notes Bibliography Index
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