Christianity Today Book Award
ECPA Top Shelf Book Cover Award
Apart from the doctrine of God, no doctrine is as comprehensive as that of creation. It is woven throughout the entire fabric of Christian theology. It goes to the deepest roots of reality and leaves no area of life untouched. Across the centuries, however, the doctrine of creation has often been eclipsed or threatened by various forms of gnosticism. Yet if Christians are to rise to current challenges related to public theology and ethics, we must regain a robust, biblical doctrine of creation.
According to Bruce Ashford and Craig Bartholomew, one of the best sources for outfitting this recovery is Dutch neo-Calvinism. Abraham Kuyper, Herman Bavinck, and their successors set forth a substantial doctrine of creation's goodness, but recent theological advances in this tradition have been limited. Now in The Doctrine of Creation Ashford and Bartholomew develop the Kuyperian tradition's rich resources on creation for systematic theology and the life of the church today.
In addition to tracing historical treatments of the doctrine, the authors explore intertwined theological themes such as the omnipotence of God, human vocation, and providence. They draw from diverse streams of Christian thought while remaining rooted in the Kuyperian tradition, with a sustained focus on doing theology in deep engagement with Scripture.
Approaching the world as God's creation changes everything. Thus The Doctrine of Creation concludes with implications for current issues, including those related to philosophy, science, the self, and human dignity. This exegetically grounded constructive theology contributes to renewed appreciation for and application of the doctrine of creation—which is ultimately a doctrine of profound hope.
Tabla de materias
Preface
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Introduction
1. I/We Believe: The Doctrine of Creation as an Article of Faith
2. The Travails and Glories of the Doctrine of Creation: Early Church to Post-Reformation
3. The Travails and Glories of the Doctrine of Creation: The Modern Period
4. God the Father Almighty
5. Laying the Foundations: The Furnishing of the Creation
6. Place, Plants, Animals, Humans, and Creation
7. The Heavenly Realm
8. Sabbath, Fall, and Misdirection
9. Creation and Culture
10. Creatio Continua: Providence and History
11. Creation, Christ, the Spirit, and the New Creation
12. Creation and . . . : Caveats on the Implications of the Doctrine of Creation
Appendix: Contours of Missional Neo-Calvinism
Bibliography
Name Index
Subject Index
Scripture Index
Sobre el autor
Craig G. Bartholomew is director of the Kirby Laing Centre for Public Theology in Cambridge, UK. He has written and edited numerous books, including Contours of the Kuyperian Tradition, Introducing Biblical Hermeneutics, Beyond the Modern Age (with Bob Goudzwaard), The Drama of Scripture (with Michael Goheen), The Doctrine of Creation (with Bruce Ashford), and a commentary on Ecclesiastes.