Acknowledgement
Preface
Part One: Freedom and Sin
1.Providence and Libertarian Calvinism
2.Sin in Reformed Theology
Part Two: Person of Christ
3.Andrew Loke's Preconscious Christ
4.Colin Gunton's Christology
Part Three: Applied Salvation
5.Anglican Hypothetical Universalism
6.T. F. Torrance and Universal Salvation
7.Regeneration Reconsidered
Part Four: Christian Life
8.Eucharistic presence
9.Prayer as Complaint
Bibliography
Index
Oliver D. Crisp is Professor of Analytic Theology, and Director of the Logos Institute for Analytic and Exegetical Theology at the University of St Andrews, UK.
Oliver D. Crisp studies the topics of human freedom, redemption and communion with one another and God, which are central themes in Christian theology.
The chapters of this volume are arranged according to how they would appear in a traditional dogmatics: dealing with issues concerning human free will and sin, studies on the person of Christ in recent theology, and human redemption. The book ends with pieces examining two important issues in Christian practice, namely, the Eucharist and prayer.
Deeply engaged with the Christian tradition, and exemplifying a generous orthodoxy, this work makes a constructive theological case for the vitality and importance of Reformed theology today.