Broken Gospel? - Waddell, Peter M.
- Format: Broché Voir le descriptif
Vous en avez un à vendre ?
Vendez-le-vôtreSoyez informé(e) par e-mail dès l'arrivée de cet article
Créer une alerte prix- Payez directement sur Rakuten (CB, PayPal, 4xCB...)
- Récupérez le produit directement chez le vendeur
- Rakuten vous rembourse en cas de problème
Gratuit et sans engagement
Félicitations !
Nous sommes heureux de vous compter parmi nos membres du Club Rakuten !
TROUVER UN MAGASIN
Retour
Avis sur Broken Gospel? Format Broché - Livre Sciences de la vie et de la terre
0 avis sur Broken Gospel? Format Broché - Livre Sciences de la vie et de la terre
Les avis publiés font l'objet d'un contrôle automatisé de Rakuten.
Présentation Broken Gospel? Format Broché
- Livre Sciences de la vie et de la terre
Résumé :
The Holocaust lies, often unacknowledged, near the heart of our contemporary crisis of religious faith. The horrific fruit of two millennia of Christian antisemitism, the slaughter calls into sharp question the moral and intellectual credibility of the Churches and the Christian faith itself. Can Christianity ever recover? In Broken Gospel? Peter Waddell suggests that it can, but only by facing unflinchingly the history that paved the way for the Nazi genocide, and the Churches? sins of omission and commission as it took place. Engaging with both Christian and Jewish scholarship, Waddell also approaches with sensitivity the theological issues that arise from the horror: questions of how the claimed holiness of the Church relates to its wickedness; of Christian-Jewish relations; of prayer and providence; of heaven and hell, and the faint possibility of forgiveness. Scholars, clergy and general readers alike will be challenged by this exercise in repentance and reconstruction, and inspired by the possibility it offers for Christian theology and practice to flourish once more.
Biographie:
Peter Waddell is Vicar of Abbots Langley and Bedmond in the Diocese of St Albans. After receiving a doctorate in theology from the University of Cambridge, he taught theology there and subsequently at the University of Winchester, where he remains a Visiting Research Fellow. He is the author of Joy: The Meaning of the Sacraments and Charles Gore: Radical Anglican.