Fr. 55.50

Salvation as Praxis - A Practical Theology of Salvation for a Multi-Faith World

English · Paperback / Softback

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Zusatztext What marks out Morris’s work is that his claim to be offering practical theology is exactly that – theology that is worked out as it is lived rather than given and applied. Would that more theology was like this ... This gem of a book has a simple idea that is well developed and offers much fruit to the reader. It deserves to be widely read, and then worked through in practice. Informationen zum Autor Dr Wayne Morris is Senior Lecturer in Contextual and Practical Theology and Deputy Head of Theology and Religious Studies at the University of Chester, UK.   Klappentext Will people of other faiths be 'saved' and to what extent should the response to this question shape Christian engagements with people of other faiths? Historically, the predominant answer to these questions has been that the person of another faith will not be saved and is therefore in need of conversion to Christianity for their salvation to be possible. Consequently, it has been understood to be the obligation of Christian persons to convert people of other faiths. More recent theologies of religions for the past half century and more have sought to reconsider these approaches to soteriology. This has sometimes led to a reaffirmation of the status quo and at other times to an alternative soteriological understanding. In seeking to articulate soteriologies that make logical and doctrinal sense, too often these new approaches to salvation and people of other faiths have paid little attention to questions of practice. Drawing on alternative understandings of soteriology as deification, healing, and liberation, each perspective having ancient roots in the Christian tradition, it is argued that salvation can be understood as form of concrete earthly practice. Understood in this way, this book considers how these alternative theologies of salvation might shape Christian practices in a way that departs from a history in which the person of another faith has been perceived as a threat to Christianity and therefore in need of conversion. Further it asks how the complex multi-faith world of the twenty-first century might better inform and shape the way in which Christian theologies frame soteriological understandings. Vorwort Argues that Christian understanding of salvation is not about a future in heaven but a way of life that shapes the present. Zusammenfassung Argues that Christian understanding of salvation is not about a future in heaven but a way of life that shapes the present. This book also argues that such ways of thinking about salvation must be given greater prominence when thinking about inter-faith questions. Inhaltsverzeichnis Acknowledgements Introduction Part I: Why a Practical Theology of Salvation? 1. A Practical Theological Perspective 2. Salvations in the Christian Tradition 3. Deconstructing Historic Practices of Salvation 4. Salvation in Contemporary Theologies of Religions Part II: Salvation as Praxis 5. 'Communion and Otherness': Salvation as Deification 6. Embodied Well-Being: Salvation as Healing 7. 'God of the Oppressed': Salvation as Liberation Conclusion Bibliography Index ...

Product details

Authors Wayne Morris
Publisher T. & T. Clark Ltd.
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 19.12.2013
 
EAN 9780567532091
ISBN 978-0-567-53209-1
No. of pages 208
Series Bloomsbury T&T Clark
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Religion/theology > Christianity

RELIGION / Theology, RELIGION / Christian Theology / Soteriology, Theology, Christian theology, Interfaith relations

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