Gravity of sin : Augustine, Luther, and Barth on homo incurvatus in se / by Matt Jenson |
Autore | Jenson Matt <1976-> |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | London ; New York, : T & T Clark, 2006 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (225 p.) |
Disciplina | 241/.3 |
Soggetto topico | Sin - Christianity |
ISBN |
0-567-66065-6
1-283-20083-X 9786613200839 0-567-57788-0 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Introduction -- Augustine's inward turn: an ambiguous beginning -- Luther's radical and religious incurvature -- (How) do women sin? : Daphne Hampson and the feminist critique of Luther -- Broadening the range of the metaphor : Barth's threefold description of sin -- Coda
Introduction -- 1. Augustine's inward turn: An ambiguous beginning -- Love makes the city -- The goodness of the garden -- Participation and relationality -- Civic foundations -- What happened? The beginning of sin -- Falsehood -- Pride -- Isolation -- Falling into slavery -- The call to humility -- Augustine's ambiguous inwardness in The Trinity -- A conclusion -- -- 2. Luther's radical and religious invurvature -- Setting the task -- Simus iustus et peccator -- Fuel to the fire: The persistence of the fomes -- Copernicux Redux -- The logic of person and works -- Totus homo? The postures of death and spirit -- Incurvatus in se as ignorance: The critique of natural understanding -- Using, enjoying: Incurvatus in se as egoism -- Homo religiosus as Homo incurvatus in se -- The violation of vocation: Transgressing the limits of calling -- Conclusion: Augustine versus Luther? -- -- 3. (How) Do women sin? Daphne Hampson and the Feminist critique of Luther -- Introduction -- Hampson's critique of Luther on sin, incurvatus in se and the self -- Hampson's alternative -- Transition: Key questions -- Problems with a gendered approach to sin -- Hampson's account of sin per se and the controlling factor of continuity -- On the explanatory sufficiency of incurvatus in se -- -- 4. Broadening the range of the metaphor: Barth's threefold description of sin -- Introduction -- A brief apology for paradigms -- Sin Christologically defined -- Humanity through a Christological lens: A closer look -- Sin as pride -- Sin as falsehood -- Sin as sloth -- Hampson and Barth: A tale of two sloths -- Conclusion -- -- Coda -- Select Bibliography -- |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910461326903321 |
Jenson Matt <1976-> | ||
London ; New York, : T & T Clark, 2006 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Gravity of sin : Augustine, Luther, and Barth on homo incurvatus in se / by Matt Jenson |
Autore | Jenson Matt <1976-> |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | London ; New York, : T & T Clark, 2006 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (225 p.) |
Disciplina | 241/.3 |
Soggetto topico | Sin - Christianity |
ISBN |
0-567-66065-6
1-283-20083-X 9786613200839 0-567-57788-0 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Introduction -- Augustine's inward turn: an ambiguous beginning -- Luther's radical and religious incurvature -- (How) do women sin? : Daphne Hampson and the feminist critique of Luther -- Broadening the range of the metaphor : Barth's threefold description of sin -- Coda
Introduction -- 1. Augustine's inward turn: An ambiguous beginning -- Love makes the city -- The goodness of the garden -- Participation and relationality -- Civic foundations -- What happened? The beginning of sin -- Falsehood -- Pride -- Isolation -- Falling into slavery -- The call to humility -- Augustine's ambiguous inwardness in The Trinity -- A conclusion -- -- 2. Luther's radical and religious invurvature -- Setting the task -- Simus iustus et peccator -- Fuel to the fire: The persistence of the fomes -- Copernicux Redux -- The logic of person and works -- Totus homo? The postures of death and spirit -- Incurvatus in se as ignorance: The critique of natural understanding -- Using, enjoying: Incurvatus in se as egoism -- Homo religiosus as Homo incurvatus in se -- The violation of vocation: Transgressing the limits of calling -- Conclusion: Augustine versus Luther? -- -- 3. (How) Do women sin? Daphne Hampson and the Feminist critique of Luther -- Introduction -- Hampson's critique of Luther on sin, incurvatus in se and the self -- Hampson's alternative -- Transition: Key questions -- Problems with a gendered approach to sin -- Hampson's account of sin per se and the controlling factor of continuity -- On the explanatory sufficiency of incurvatus in se -- -- 4. Broadening the range of the metaphor: Barth's threefold description of sin -- Introduction -- A brief apology for paradigms -- Sin Christologically defined -- Humanity through a Christological lens: A closer look -- Sin as pride -- Sin as falsehood -- Sin as sloth -- Hampson and Barth: A tale of two sloths -- Conclusion -- -- Coda -- Select Bibliography -- |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910789801203321 |
Jenson Matt <1976-> | ||
London ; New York, : T & T Clark, 2006 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Gravity of sin : Augustine, Luther and Barth on homo incurvatus in se / / by Matt Jenson |
Autore | Jenson Matt <1976-> |
Edizione | [1st ed.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | London ; New York, : T & T Clark, 2006 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (225 p.) |
Disciplina | 241/.3 |
Soggetto topico | Sin - Christianity |
ISBN |
0-567-66065-6
1-283-20083-X 9786613200839 0-567-57788-0 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Introduction -- Augustine's inward turn: an ambiguous beginning -- Luther's radical and religious incurvature -- (How) do women sin? : Daphne Hampson and the feminist critique of Luther -- Broadening the range of the metaphor : Barth's threefold description of sin -- Coda
Introduction -- 1. Augustine's inward turn: An ambiguous beginning -- Love makes the city -- The goodness of the garden -- Participation and relationality -- Civic foundations -- What happened? The beginning of sin -- Falsehood -- Pride -- Isolation -- Falling into slavery -- The call to humility -- Augustine's ambiguous inwardness in The Trinity -- A conclusion -- -- 2. Luther's radical and religious invurvature -- Setting the task -- Simus iustus et peccator -- Fuel to the fire: The persistence of the fomes -- Copernicux Redux -- The logic of person and works -- Totus homo? The postures of death and spirit -- Incurvatus in se as ignorance: The critique of natural understanding -- Using, enjoying: Incurvatus in se as egoism -- Homo religiosus as Homo incurvatus in se -- The violation of vocation: Transgressing the limits of calling -- Conclusion: Augustine versus Luther? -- -- 3. (How) Do women sin? Daphne Hampson and the Feminist critique of Luther -- Introduction -- Hampson's critique of Luther on sin, incurvatus in se and the self -- Hampson's alternative -- Transition: Key questions -- Problems with a gendered approach to sin -- Hampson's account of sin per se and the controlling factor of continuity -- On the explanatory sufficiency of incurvatus in se -- -- 4. Broadening the range of the metaphor: Barth's threefold description of sin -- Introduction -- A brief apology for paradigms -- Sin Christologically defined -- Humanity through a Christological lens: A closer look -- Sin as pride -- Sin as falsehood -- Sin as sloth -- Hampson and Barth: A tale of two sloths -- Conclusion -- -- Coda -- Select Bibliography -- |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910812452603321 |
Jenson Matt <1976-> | ||
London ; New York, : T & T Clark, 2006 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|