Photo de l'auteur
48+ oeuvres 2,704 utilisateurs 8 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Bernard Ramm (1916-92) served as professor of Christian theology at American Baptist Seminary of the West

Œuvres de Bernard L. Ramm

Protestant Christian Evidences (1953) 180 exemplaires
A handbook of contemporary theology (1966) 178 exemplaires
Hermeneutics (1971) 144 exemplaires
Varieties of Christian apologetics (1961) 129 exemplaires
The Evangelical Heritage: A Study in Historical Theology (1973) — Auteur — 122 exemplaires
The witness of the Spirit (1959) 72 exemplaires
The Pattern of Religious Authority (1957) 61 exemplaires
A Christian Appeal to Reason (1972) 56 exemplaires
Rapping about the Spirit (1974) 26 exemplaires
IS GOD " DEAD " ? (1966) 3 exemplaires
Them He Glorified 1 exemplaire
The Baptist Heritage 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Christianity in Culture: A Study in Dynamic Biblical Theologizing in Cross-Cultural Perspective (1656) — Avant-propos, quelques éditions169 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Membres

Critiques

DISCO D: BACKUP / TEOLOGIA
AYUDAS PASTORALES / DICCIONARIOS
 
Signalé
abdiel91 | May 16, 2020 |
Nineteen eighty-three was a frightening time to be an evangelical theologian. Liberal, existential, process, and liberation theologies (to name a few) put pressure on conservatives to respond, but many felt untrained for the specialized tasks of redaction, form, and textual criticism. Evangelicals had two choices: ignore or engage. Ramm chose to fight.

An Evangelical Christology is two books rolled into one. On the one hand, Ramm states with clarity the various elements of Christology. The further into the book you read, however, the larger the second purpose looms: this book is a manual for war. It is never enough for Ramm to state what he believes—he defines his views as opposed to liberal theology, especially that of Rudolf Bultmann.

The overall method Ramm uses to fight back is revealed in the subtitle: “Ecumenic and Historic”. Ramm begins with the classic creeds—Apostolic, Nicene, Chalcedon, etc.—and shows how evangelical christology stands in line with church history (and how his liberal opponents have forsaken their birthright).

The strength of this volume lies in Ramm’s clear exposition of the classic elements of Christology (although I am always frustrated at how most Christologies, this one included, virtually ignore Jesus’ three years of earthly ministry). The weaknesses are twofold:

1. The battlelines have been redrawn. As culture has shifted from a modern to a post-modern worldview, the war between conservative and liberal theologies seems almost quaint. Ramm’s 1983 battle against the forces of liberalism now reads more like a history of theology.

2. Ramm ignores his own situatedness. This comes to the surface (ironically? hypocritically?) when he discusses why John’s gospel is different from the synoptics. Ramm wisely asks, “What kind of gospel would John write if he lived in Ephesus about thirty years and carried on a Christian dialogue at a high level in its most sophisticated community? He would write a gospel . . . that would reflect his effort to reframe the original Christian message to make it most effective to his audience in Ephesus” (145). Ramm understands that the writing of John’s gospel was situated in the cultural river (a John H. Walton phrase) of his day yet understands himself as somehow transcendent to the culture of modernism which led him to war in the first place.

The apostle John once brought Jesus a concern: a person outside Jesus’ group of disciples was going around exorcising demons. Jesus replied, “Do not stop him; for whoever is not against you is for you” (Luke 9:50 NRSV). An Evangelical Christology would have been a much stronger book had Ramm laid down his weapons and sought to learn from the strengths of his theological interlocutors.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
StephenBarkley | May 30, 2017 |
In this very interesting book, Bernard Ramm looks at Barth's methodology as a proposal for evangelical theology. His contention is that almost everyone who comments on Barth doesn't get Barth as well as he does. There is no doubt that Ramm knows the scope of Barth's contribution very well. But there also is no doubt that he is absolutely fascinated by Barth, to the point where it is hard to see his critical distance from his subject. Despite this, Ramm has a point. Barth did something that evangelical theology desperately needs to do: take both modernity and historic orthodoxy seriously. I think Ramm gets that this involves a helpful theological tension - unlike other proposals for evangelical theology that want to land either with modernity or with an interpretation of historic orthodoxy. He is also doing us a service in extracting Barth's methodology. That is the most useful piece for theologians, like myself, who are critical of Barth's Calvinism. Other than the Barth can do no wrong rhetoric, this is a helpful and interesting book.… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
pomorev | 1 autre critique | Sep 9, 2010 |

Listes

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi

Auteurs associés

Statistiques

Œuvres
48
Aussi par
1
Membres
2,704
Popularité
#9,503
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
8
ISBN
39
Langues
5

Tableaux et graphiques