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Absolute Person and Moral Experience

A Study in Neo-Calvinism

Absolute Person and Moral Experience

A Study in Neo-Calvinism

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Hardback

£90.00

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN: 9780567707352
Number of Pages: 224
Published: 25/08/2022
Width: 15.7 cm
Height: 23.4 cm

Presenting a neo-Calvinist account of human moral experience, this book is an advance upon the tradition of Augustinian moral theology.

The first two chapters are theological interpretations of Genesis 2:17 and 3:6 respectively. Chapter 3 approaches the neo-Calvinist notion of God as absolute person through a consideration of theologies of human reason and history. Chapter 4 considers the relationship between absolute person and classical trinitarianism, and the significance of absolute person for accommodation, hermeneutics, and the Creator/creature relation and distinction. The fifth chapter considers the role of the incarnation in Bavinck’s thought, and thus provides a backdrop for reflection upon absolute person from a biblical theological point of view.

Shannon concludes with the claim that, according to the Bavincks, Vos, and Van Til, human moral experience is the product of a divine self-expression primarily in the Son.

Preface

Chapter 1:
Divine Moral Character Self-Given

Chapter 2:
Divine Moral Character Transgressed

Chapter 3:
Absolute Person, Reason, and History

Chapter 4:
From Meta-Ethics to Trinity to Accommodation

Chapter 5:
Bavinck on the Uniqueness of the Incarnation

Conclusion:
Moral Experience and the Son Forsaken

Bibliography
Index

Nathan D. Shannon (Westminster Theological Seminary, USA)

Nathan D. Shannon is Lecturer in Apologetics and Systematic Theology at Westminster Theological Seminary, USA

It is emblematic of neo-Calvinism's global impact that its theology is now elaborated with great skill by an American scholar who graduated in the Netherlands and taught in Korea. Focusing on what unites instead of what divides them, Dr Shannon probes the theological resources of Bavinck, Vos and Van Til in a compelling attempt to tease out the contours of a neo-Calvinist account of moral experience. -- Gijsbert van den Brink, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands Nathan Shannon's erudite study demonstrates how neo-Calvinism affirms that the history of redemptive economy presupposes both divine immutability and actual relationality in God's triune essence. This is an encouraging breakthrough for readers wearied by false dichotomies between orthodoxy and ideas that are often thought to be modern inventions. -- Shao Kai Tseng, Zhejiang University, China