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E-raamat: God Who Is for Us: Explorations in Constructive Dogmatics

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How should we think about God? For Christianity, God is not merely the transcendent source and creator of the world; God is also immanently involved in creation, sustaining, upholding, and intervening in the cosmos in order to save and redeem beloved creatures. God is for us.

The inaugural Scottish Dogmatics Conference explores this dimension of the character and nature of God in dialogue with Scripture and the Christian tradition and in pursuit of constructive theology for today.

Contributors include:

  • John Behr
  • Bruce McCormack
  • Amy Peeler
  • Fred Sanders
  • Judith Wolfe


Based on the inaugural Scottish Dogmatics Conference, this volume explores the Christian belief that God is not merely the transcendent creator of the world, but is also the God who is for us, immanently involved in creation, sustaining, upholding, and intervening in the cosmos in order to save and redeem beloved creatures.
Plenary Speakers:

* John Behr, Speaking of Incarnation: Ancient Paradigms and Modern
Predicaments
* Bruce McCormack, The God for us is, as such, the God for himself
* Amy Peeler, The Laboured God: Impassibility, Incarnation, and
Discipleship
* Fred Sanders, God is God for God: Aseity, Inseity, and Proseity in
Evangelical Perspective
* Judith Wolfe, Thou Hast Made Us for Thyself

5-7 additional essays by breakout speakers to be included in the published
volume
Oliver D. Crisp (PhD, University of London; DLitt University of Aberdeen) is Professor of Analytic Theology at the Logos Institute for Analytic and Exegetical Theology, St. Mary's College, the University of St. Andrews, Scotland. He is author of numerous books in analytic and systematic theology, including Analyzing Doctrine: Toward a Systematic Theology; Deviant Calvinism: Broadening Reformed Theology; Divinity and Humanity: The Incarnation Reconsidered; God Incarnate: Explorations in Christology; Retrieving Doctrine: Essays in Reformed Theology; and Revisioning Christology: Theology in the Reformed Tradition. Together with Fred Sanders, he is co-founder of the Los Angeles Theology Conference.

Paul T. Nimmo (PhD, University of Edinburgh) is Professor and Kings Chair of Systematic Theology at the University of Aberdeen, Scotland, and the co-director of the Aberdeen Centre for Protestant Theology. He is the author of Being in Action: The Theological Shape of Barths Ethical Vision and Barth: A Guide for the Perplexed, as well as the co-editor of Kenosis: The Self-Emptying of Christ in Scripture and Theology, The Oxford Handbook of Karl Barth, and The Cambridge Companion to Reformed Theology. He is also the senior editor of the International Journal of Systematic Theology.