Tag: <span>02 intermediate</span>

The Disappearance of Punishment: Metaphors, Models & The Meaning of the Atonement (Boersma, 2003)

Our late modern culture has become increasingly sensitive to the dangers of abusive structures and institutions that foster self-interest, domination, exploitation, and other forms of violence. Atonement theologies have followed this trend with an increasingly apprehensive stance toward traditional notions of covenant curse, divine justice and wrath, and penal substitution.

Setting An Agenda for Political Theology, Joan Lockwood O’Donovan at Garrett Evangelical Theological Seminary (Lockwood O’Donovan, 2007)

Lecture and Q&A from Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary 2007 Conference on Setting the Agenda for Political Theology

“Judge not” and “Judge for yourselves” (O’Donovan, 2013)

[gview file="http://symposiumonjudgment.files.wordpress.com/2013/04/judge-not-and-judge-for-yourselves.pdf" save="1"]

The presenting question about the category of judgment is its ambivalence: why is it an activity that we are sometimes warned against, sometimes encouraged to undertake? To begin with, we must make some
cursory observations on the scope of the term.