The Inspiration of the Holy Spirit seeks to instruct and to inspire by focusing on key verses in the Scripture and by providing critical interpretations, scholarly information, and personal beliefs. The sermons in this book are meant to teach and to reach audiences, regardless of race, gender, or denomination. Despite challenges and everyday hardships, the authors maintain that God is an ever-present help and source of strength and healing. The authors use creative insights and imagination to discuss biblical verses and to relate the Bible to many different situations in life. The Inspiration of the Holy Spirit should be in every household because the sermons are both inspiring and practical, written in a broad way to include philosophical questions of human existence. These questions are correlated with theological answers, gained from diverse experiences and practical wisdom through the ages.
Ernst Troeltsch and Comparative Theology examines the methodological attempts of Ernst Troeltsch and Robert Neville for discerning Christian normativity. The investigation of Troeltsch focuses on his treatment of the absoluteness of Christianity and highlights the crisis brought upon absolute religious claims by the study of the history of religions. By rejecting both the supernatural-exclusive apologetic of orthodox Protestantism and the evolutionary apologetic of liberal Protestantism, Troeltsch insists that theology's method should be the history of religions' method (die religionsgeschichtliche Methode). Like Troeltsch, Neville agrees with historical inquiries, but, contrary to Troeltsch, Neville advances an axiological hypothesis to thinking, which is founded in valuation. Neville explains the role of valuation at the imaginative level of thinking and relates it to his theory of normative truth in religious symbols. This study shows that Neville begins with Troeltsch's methodological presuppositions but achieves more normative theology than Troeltsch, especially on ways in which God is engaged in symbolically shaped thinking and practice. Both thinkers offer creative insights for theology that make possible a critical comparison of truth claims regarding the validity of Christianity in and for a historically conscious age.
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