Tag: <span>01 document</span>

Funeral Meditation: He Read the Book (Hunsinger, 2008)

In my last conversation with Peter, a few days before he died, he stressed that resurrection hope — the hope by which he himself had learned to live — was a hope for this life and not just for the next. He wanted the first Question from the Heidelberg Catechism to be included in his Memorial Service. We will recite it in a moment. “Tell them it’s not just a hope about death,” Peter instructed me. “Tell them it’s a hope about life. Tell them it’s our only comfort in life and in death, in life and not just in death.” Those were, in effect, his last words.

The Eschatological Meaning of Jesus’ Resurrection as a Historical Event: A Comparison of the Views of Wolfhart Pannenberg and N.T. Wright (Bang, 2014)

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The emergence of canonical theism (Abraham, 2008)

From “Canonical Theism: A Proposal for Theology and the Church”:
Canonical theism as a living option for both church and academy emerged over time as a fruit of intense personal struggle within the contours of contemporary Protestantism. Having expressed its claims elsewhere in this volume in terms of cold-blooded, impersonal theses, my aim in this paper is to provide a brief account of the spiritual and intellectual journey that lies behind it.

The Person and Work of Christ Revisited: In Conversation with Karl Barth (Christopher Holmes, 2013)

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