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The
Metaphor of God Incarnate
London: SCM Press, Second Edition : 2005.
A sustained critique
of the idea that Jesus was literally God as well as literally a
man. Argues that Jesus himself did not teach what was to become
the orthodox Christian understanding of him; that the Chalcedonian
dogma of his two natures, human and divine, cannot be made coherently
intelligible; that the alternative versions of kenosis and the contemporary
two minds theory also fail; that the traditional dogma has been
used to justify great human evils; that the idea of divine incarnation
is better understood as metaphor (as in Winston Churchill
incarnated the British will to resist Hitler); that we should
see Jesus as unambiguously a human being who was so open to God
that he makes God real to us; and that Christianity can then see
itself as one major human response to the Ultimate among others.
(Trans. Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish.)
John Hick is
a professional theologian and philosopher of high stature. He researches
thoroughly and writes beautifully. One can only admire his ability
to communicate and his scholarly acumen. At the same time, Hick
represents a threat to traditional Christianity. . . The book establishes
the need for someone to vindicate the faith of the church in incarnation
on the high level in which Hick does his critical work (Prof.
Clark Pinnock, Calvin Theological Journal).
"One
may disagree with some of the conclusions of this most honest and
open of theologians, but must admit that he has articulated the
feelings of many serious Christians today, and sharply delineated
many serious issues in the continuing debate about Christology which
the Church cannot afford to ignore". (Tom Baker in the
Church Times).
"John Hick takes with great seriousness the various conservative
efforts to reaffirm literally traditional doctrines of incarnation
and atonement. He rightly believes that most people continue to
identify Christian faith with these doctrines, and that this does
great harm. The book is a rigorous and sustained polemic against
these doctrines and the arguments offered in their defence. Even
one like myself, for whom the idea of incarnation is central, cannot
but applaud the forcefulness of the attack on the ways of thinking
that block the reconceptualization of Christian faith that is so
badly needed" (John Cobb)
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Dialogues
in the Philosophy of Religion,
Basingstoke: Palgrave (Macmillans academic imprint), 2001
After
an intellectual autobiography, reprinted articles on the relation
between Christianity and other religions, with replies by others:
Among philosophers, William Alston (who contributes a new response),
Alvin Plantinga, Peter van Inwagen, George Mavrodes (who also contributes
a new response), William Rowe, Paul Eddy, D.Z. Phillips. Among evangelicals,
Clark Pinnock. Among Roman Catholics, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger,
Gavin DCosta, Paul Knitter.
Buy from bookshops
or by clicking on this direct link:amazon.co.uk.
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