The Christian Doctrine of Justification and Reconciliation: The Positive Development of the DoctrineWipf and Stock Publishers, 2004. gada 24. aug. - 686 lappuses The Ritschlian theology, a reaction against rationalism, was influential in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Ritschl held that God could be known only through the revelation contained in the person and work of Jesus. His theology stressed ethics and the community of man and repudiated metaphysics. Ritschl's most characteristic work is presented here and has been translated as 'The Christian Doctrine of Justification and Reconciliation'. In it Ritschl proposes understanding the doctrine of justification in interpersonal rather than juridical categories. |
Saturs
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
PAGE | 8 |
The scientific conditions of Systematic Theology | 14 |
Justification equivalent to forgiveness of sins | 38 |
Forgiveness of sins as the removal of the separation of | 47 |
Forgiveness of sins as removal of guilt | 54 |
Objection arising from the fact of sins continuing in | 57 |
Forgiveness of sins as pardon | 60 |
Difference between the Kingdom of God and the Church | 284 |
The eternity of God | 297 |
Civil society a precondition of the Kingdom of God | 303 |
Possibility of reconciliation derived from Gods love as directed to the Kingdom of God | 318 |
The standard of the Christian idea of sin | 327 |
The kingdom of sin | 338 |
Evil and Divine punishment | 350 |
Sin and the possibility of its forgiveness | 367 |
Forgiveness of sins or justification equivalent to reconciliation | 72 |
The synthetic forrn of the justifying judgment of God | 79 |
CHAPTER II | 86 |
Justification as an act of God the Father equivalent to adoption | 97 |
Faith as a condition of justification | 100 |
Justification referred to the community of believers and to the individual in it | 108 |
Freedom of believers from the law | 114 |
Particularity or universality of the Divine purpose of justifica tion | 126 |
CHAPTER III | 140 |
Methods of gaining individual assurance of salvation | 159 |
Justification as ground of the positive freedom given by faith in providence | 174 |
Views of Christs saving work from predominantly negative | 178 |
The place of this idea in tradition | 181 |
B THE PRESUPPOSITIONS CHAPTER IV | 193 |
The peculiar character of religious knowledge | 203 |
The socalled proofs of the existence of God | 211 |
The personality of God | 230 |
The Socinian conception of the moral worldorder | 238 |
The orthodox conception of the moral worldorder | 245 |
Possibility of reconciliation in the latter view | 262 |
Love as determination of the nature of God in relation to the Son and the Kingdom of God | 270 |
CHAPTER VI | 385 |
The Divinity of Christ as a problem of theology | 399 |
The scheme of the two states and the three offices | 417 |
Views of Christs saving work on individuals apart from | 420 |
The contradistinction between the religious and the ethical | 450 |
The ethical estimate of Christ according to His vocation | 470 |
THE PROOF | 485 |
The teleological relation of forgiveness to eternal life | 495 |
The necessity of ethically good action arising from the supra | 507 |
The necessity of the forgiveness of sins in view of the goal | 523 |
CHAPTER VIII | 536 |
Personal conviction of faith in Christ as the form of | 560 |
THE CONSEQUENCES | 577 |
CHAPTER IX | 609 |
Patience | 625 |
Humility | 632 |
Prayer | 640 |
Christian perfection | 647 |
Action in our moral calling | 661 |
671 | |
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The Christian Doctrine of Justification and Reconciliation: The Positive ... Albrecht Ritschl Ierobežota priekšskatīšana - 2004 |
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according action activity appears assurance attain attribute become believers character Christ Christian Church complete conceived conception connection consciousness consequence consists death definite depends determined direct distinction Divine doctrine effect eternal ethical evils existence experience explain expression fact faith Father feeling fellowship final follows forgiveness freedom further give given God's grace ground guilt hand historical human idea independent individual interpretation Jesus judgment justification kind Kingdom knowledge latter likewise limited Luther Lutheran maintained means merely moral namely nature necessary object operation opposition original particular perfect position possible practical present principle proved punishment question realised reason recognised reconciliation Reformed regarded relation religion religious represented result revelation salvation sense significance sinners sins spiritual stands statement suffering theologians theology theory things thought tion true trust truth universal vocation whole