The person and place of Jesus Christ / P.T. Forsyth. [print]
Material type: TextSeries: the Congregational Union lecturePublication details: London : Independent Press, (c)1909Description: xix, 357 pages ; 22 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- BT201.L467.P877 1909
- COPYRIGHT NOT covered - Click this link to request copyright permission: https://lib.ciu.edu/copyright-request-form
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Circulating Book (checkout times vary with patron status) | G. Allen Fleece Library Circulating Collection - First Floor | Non-fiction | BT201.L467.P877 1909 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 31923001639703 |
Scheme
A. Reveille and Password
Lecture 1. Lay religion and Apostolic B. Reconnaissance
Lecture 2. The Religion of Jesus and the Gospel of Christ
Lecture 3. The Greatness of Christ and the Interpretations thereof C. The Advance I. First Parallel
Lecture 4. The Testimony of Christ's Self-consciousness Was He a Part of His own Gospel
Lecture 5. The testimony of Apostolic Inspiration, in General
Lecture 6. The Testimony of Apostolic Inspiration, in Particular
Lecture 7. The testimony of Experience in The Soul and in the Church II. Second parallel
Lecture 8. The Moralising of Dogma, Illustrated by the Omnipotence of God D. The Advance in Force
Lecture 9 Same
Lecture 10. The Pre-existence of Christ
Lecture 11. The Kenosis of Self-Emptying of Christ
Lecture 12. The Plerosis or the Self-Fulfillment of Christ
COPYRIGHT NOT covered - Click this link to request copyright permission:
https://lib.ciu.edu/copyright-request-form
Forsyth was born May 12, 1848, Aberdeen, Aberdeenshire, Scotland died November 11, 1921, London, England. The son of a postman, Forsyth studied at the University of Aberdeen and at Göttingen, where he was deeply influenced by the German Protestant theologian Albrecht Ritschl. After serving several Congregational churches in England, including Emmanuel Church, Cambridge, he became principal of Hackney Theological College in London. He began as a theologically liberal but gradually modified his position to one that resembled most the “positive theology” found in Germany.
His Positive Preaching and the Modern Mind (1907) and Lectures on the Church and the Sacraments (1917) recalled Protestants to the richness of their own teaching about the church at a time when liberalism and evangelicalism together were threatening to obscure it. Forsyth's most famous book, The Person and Place of Jesus Christ (1909), attempted to moralize dogma, to express in terms of modern personal experience the meaning of the doctrine of Christ's divinity. In Christ on Parnassus (1911), dealing with theology and the arts, and in The Justification of God (1916), he considered the relation of Christian faith to the questions of his day.
He reasserted the classic faith of the Reformation in terms appropriate to his own time, bringing the word 'grace' back into protestant theology and showing anew what was meant by the sovereignty of God as revealed in the Holy Love in Christ. AMAZON
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