TextPublication details: Phillipsburg, N.J. : P&R Pub., c2010.Description: xxxv, 257 p. ; 23 cmISBN: | Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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Ethiopian Graduate School of Theology Library Available at Circulation Section | 231.042 Hel 2010 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 22348 |
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| 231.042 Gun 2008 Revelation and reason : [manuscript] : prolegomena to systematic theology / | 231.042 Gun 2008 c.2 Revelation and reason : [manuscript] : prolegomena to systematic theology / | 231.042 Heb 1988 The ocean of truth : a defence of objective theism / | 231.042 Hel 2010 "Right Reason" and the Princeton mind : [manuscript] : an unorthodox proposal / | 231.042 Hol 2002 Listening to the past : the place of tradition in theology / | 231.042 Mee 2003 Longing to know / [manuscript] / | 231.042 Mor 2003 Realism and Christian faith : [manuscript] : God, grammar, and meaning / |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 223-247) and index.
Foreword / John D. Woodbridge -- The moral context -- A "rather bald rationalism"? -- The task of Christian scholarship -- The critique of theological liberalism -- "Re-imagining" the Princeton mind -- Theological aesthetics at old Princeton Seminary -- Conclusion: The role and function of doctrine.
"Were Machen and his predecessors at old Princeton Seminary really the purveyors of an essentially humanistic philosophy rather than the champions of Reformed orthodoxy? Was the driving force behind their theological labors, in other words, an understanding of religious epistemology that supplants the epistemological assumptions of the Reformed tradition with those of an 'alien philosophy'? The study...is grounded in the conviction that the reigning (or 'orthodox') interpretation of the Princeton theology cannot stand because it ignores the moral rather than the merely rational nature of the Princetonians' thought. The author suggests that old Princeton's religious epistemology is compatable with the assumptions of the Reformed tradition because its emphasis on 'right reason' is moral rather than merely rational" -- Book Introduction.
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