1: Gerald O'Collins, SJ: Redemption: Some Crucial Issues
Biblical Questions
2: Christopher Seitz: Reconciliation and the Plain Sense Witness of
Scripture
3: Gordon D. Fee: Paul and the Metaphors for Salvation: Some
Reflections on Pauline Soteriology
4: N. T. Wright: Redemption from the New Perspective? Towards a
Multi-Layered Pauline Theology of the Cross
5: Jean-Noël Aletti, SJ: `God Made Christ to be Sin' (2 Corinthians
5: 21): Reflections on a Pauline Paradox
6: Peter Ochs: Israel's Redeemer is the One to Whom and with Whom
She Prays
Patristic and Medieval Periods
7: Brian Daley, SJ: `He Himself is Our Peace' (Ephesians 2: 14):
Early Christian Views of Redemption in Christ
8: Caroline Walker Bynum: The Power in the Blood: Sacrifice,
Satisfaction, and Substitution in Late Medieval Soteriology
Foundational and Systematic Issues
9: Eleonore Stump: Narrative and the Problem of Evil: Suffering and
Redemption
10: Stephen T. Davis: Karma, Salvation, and Grace
11: C. Stephen Evans: Catholic-Protestant Views of Justification:
How Should Christians View Theological Disagreement?
The Redemption Practised and Proclaimed
12: Robert Kiely: `Graven with an Iron Pen': The Persistence of
Redemption as a Theme in Literature and Art
13: David Brown: Images of Redemption in Art and Music
14: Marguerite Shuster: The Redemption of the Created Order:
Sermons on Romans 8: 18-25
Stephen T. Davis is Professor of the Philosophy of Religion,
Claremont McKenna College, California.
Daniel Kendall, SJ is Professor of Theology, University of San
Francisco. Gerald O'Collins, SJ is Professor of Systematic and
Fundamental Theology, Gregorian University, Rome.
`While the depth of scholarshipin this collection undoubtedly
commends it principally to those with a formal theological
background, the chief merit of the book is that there is also much
that will appeal tothe informed general reader.'
New Directions
`I would recommend this book highly to all involved professionally
in the study of redemption...'
The Furrow
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