Focusing on the Christological and Trinitarian dimensions of creation, this work delves into the theological insights of the early church fathers. It examines how these foundational figures understood the relationship between Christ, the Trinity, and the act of creation, offering a rich exploration of early Christian thought and its implications for contemporary theology.
Modern culture presents significant challenges to Christian faith and theology, prompting a critical examination of their interplay. The book emphasizes that contemporary faith emerges from Christian reflections on the world and humanity, suggesting that faith can also serve to challenge and rejuvenate cultural norms. Through this exploration, it highlights the dynamic relationship between belief and cultural transformation.
Martin Luther's effort to put God at the very center of human life hinged on five principles: sola gratia, sola fide, sola Scriptura, solus Christus, and ecclesia semper reformanda. They formed the basis for a much-needed reformation of the Christian church projected by Luther and others. Besides inspiring an important renewal of Christian life, however, the Reformation also occasioned the breakup of Western Christianity, which in turn justified religious wars, provided an anti-witness to Christian revelation, privatized the faith, and facilitated the secularization of society as a whole. On the occasion of the five hundredth anniversary of the Reformation, this book attempts to appropriate, situate, and to some degree reinterpret Luther's most precious and enduring insights on the basis of the above five principles, which come to mean that God's being and action must always come first. On the basis of Luther's writings, the book also attempts to consider how grace reaches out to freedom, faith to reason, Scripture to church tradition, Christ to ministry, church to mediation. God's being and action always come first, yet God's first gift, creation, and the mediations that derive from it are not undone or rendered irrelevant.
Die Traumzeit steht im Zentrum der seit Jahrtausenden überlieferten Aborigine-Mythologie. Sie erklärt, wie alles entstanden ist und begründet die Regeln, nach denen die Völker zusammenleben. Paul Callaghan zeigt gemeinsam mit dem Ngemba-Ältesten Onkel Paul Gordon, was wir aus dem uralten Wissen einer der ältesten Kulturen der Welt für unser modernes Leben lernen können. Zahlreiche Übungen und Reflexionsfragen zu Themen wie erfüllenden Beziehungen, Resilienz und Zufriedenheit liefern wertvolle Impulse für die eigene persönliche Entwicklung sowie für ein wertschätzendes Miteinander, in dem Vielfalt anerkannt, akzeptiert und respektiert wird. Entdecken Sie die Kraft des Geschichtenerzählens, begeben Sie sich auf die Reise zu Ihrem wahren Selbst – und machen Sie die Welt zu einem besseren Ort.