The Human Face of God
Released: Jan 01, 1979
Publisher: Westminster/John Knox Press
Format: Paperback, 270 pages
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Description:
A comment from one reader: "The Human Face of God" is an academic work, but it is one of those rare pieces which sacrifices none of its scholarship while being quite accessible, even for the lay person. Robinson starts with the humanity of Christ and works his way up from there, resulting in a very, very high Christology, which I suspect will surprise those who think of Robinson as a liberal who considered Christ to simply be a good man. Far from it. Robinson pushes deep into the biblical portrait of the Christ, and he never sacrifices all the imagery and claims that the Bible makes possible for Christ. Moreover, he situates his Christology within the context of the debates and writings of the early church (most importantly, guarding against the heresy of docetism at ever turn), and he also stands in conversation with the great theologians of the Christian tradition, especially Thomas Aquinas and Karl Barth. Again, the scope of the scholarship is hard to even fathom, and the methodology is exquisite."
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