About this item
Highlights
- Everyone seems to be talking about trinitarian theology these days--theologians, pastors and theologically smart laypeople.
- About the Author: Roderick T. Leupp is the author of Knowing the Name of God (InterVarsity Press).
- 207 Pages
- Religion + Beliefs, Christian Theology
Description
About the Book
Roderick Leupp explores the terrain of contemporary trinitarian theology. While his approach is thematic, he introduces readers to the essential elements of the important trinitarian theologians of the past half-century.
Book Synopsis
Everyone seems to be talking about trinitarian theology these days--theologians, pastors and theologically smart laypeople. If you have felt like an outsider to these conversations, or just wondered why trinitarian theology has generated so much talk, this book is for you.Roderick Leupp describes the renewal of trinitarian theology in recent decades and introduces us to the trinitarian thought of theologians such as Karl Rahner, Karl Barth, Jürgen Moltmann, John Zizioulas, Robert Jenson and Catherine LaCugna. Leupp shows us how trinitarian is an adjective for the very grammar of the Christian faith. And he helps us see how our thinking about the Godhead, the cross, the church, ethics and spirituality can be transformed by trinitarian theology.Writing in a style that is always reflective, often poetic and sometimes deeply personal, Leupp puts theology in conversation with life, making connections we might otherwise miss. And piercingly, he weaves into his reflections on the triune God his own experience of the traumatic injury of his daughter. This is a book that will expand your understanding of the triune God who is Father, Son and Spirit.
Review Quotes
"In this probing and wide-ranging work, Roderick T. Leupp explores the subtleties of trinitarian theology and its significance for Christian thought and existence. The Renewal of Trinitarian Theology is a welcome contribution to the growing body of literature on the trinitarian renaissance, and witnesses to the fact that the triune God is not a philosophical problem to solve but the church's life-giving hope."
--Paul Louis Metzger, Professor of Christian Theology and Theology of Culture, Multnomah Biblical Seminary"It has often been said that the doctrine of the Holy Trinity is better caught than taught. In step with that sentiment, and in the 'spirit' of the late Catherine LaCugna, Rod Leupp shares LaCugna's conviction that 'the doctrine of the Trinity is in fact the most practical of all doctrines, ' and thus sets out to explore why the recent renewal of trinitarian theology is underway. At this point of query, Rod enters into a rich and probing conversation with some of the most prominent theologians--Karl Barth, Jürgen Moltmann, Karl Rahner, Paul Fiddes, Paul Molnar, Dorothy Sayers, Wolfhart Pannenberg, Robert Jenson, Thomas Torrance, Eberhard Jüngel, Christoph Schwöbel, Elie Wiesel, et al.--and investigates with them salient patterns and themes that are at the very heart and mystery of the triune God. While there are many discernible insights and reasons for the resurgence of interest in trinitarian theology that are examined in this book, the most ignored reason that is brilliantly explored by Rod Leupp is this: the triune God of Scriptures, who is 'for us and our salvation, ' is the triune God who 'suffers with us.' It is in this mystery of God's suffering where some of Rod's deepest and most personal insight into the mystery and wisdom of trinitarian reflection emerges. This book will not only familiarize one with the landscape of trinitarian theology, but it will also draw one deeply into the life of the triune God who shares our life by suffering right alongside us, enabling us to 'truly' know God as Father, Son and Holy Spirit, and thus come to know the greatest mystery of the Trinity: God is love."
--K. Steve McCormick, Professor of Historical Theology and William M. Greathouse Chair for Wesleyan-Holiness Theology, Nazarene Theological SeminaryAbout the Author
Roderick T. Leupp is the author of Knowing the Name of God (InterVarsity Press).