ABSTRACT

This volume presents a wide-ranging selection from the writings of a leading contemporary philosophical theologian, Vincent Brümmer. In his many books and articles Brümmer has demonstrated how the tools of philosophical analysis are not only fruitful but also essential for dealing with the central issues of systematic theology. The title of this volume, Meaning and the Christian Faith, highlights two characteristic themes that recur throughout the many writings of Vincent Brümmer. Much of his work has been devoted to exploring the meaning of the Christian faith, and especially of its central claim that God is a personal being whose fellowship believers may enjoy. On the other hand, Brümmer has also shown that religious belief should not be understood as an explanatory theory but rather as a way in which believers understand the meaning of their lives and their experience of the world and direct their lives accordingly. Thus in the Christian tradition believers claim that their lives are meaningful because they seek to attain ultimate happiness in the love of God. In the introductory sections throughout this volume Vincent Brümmer describes how he came to pay attention to the various themes dealt with in his writings and explains why he came to deal with them in the ways he did.

part I|27 pages

Introduction

part II|36 pages

Christian Philosophy

chapter Chapter Two|3 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter Three|11 pages

Dooyeweerd and the Role of Religion in Philosophy

chapter Chapter Five|10 pages

The Dilemma of a Christian Philosophy

part III|35 pages

Values and Facts, Religion and Science

chapter Chapter Six|3 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter Seven|11 pages

Are There True Answers to Ultimate Questions?

chapter Chapter Eight|14 pages

Science, Religion and the Agency of God

part IV|54 pages

Language and Thought

chapter Chapter Ten|2 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter Eleven|17 pages

Speech Acts

chapter Chapter Twelve|20 pages

Words and Concepts

chapter Chapter Thirteen|12 pages

Metaphorical Thinking

part V|55 pages

Knowledge and Reality

chapter Chapter Fourteen|3 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter Fifteen|17 pages

Knowledge and Belief

chapter Chapter Sixteen|8 pages

I Know that my Redeemer Lives

chapter Chapter Seventeen|10 pages

Does God Really Exist?

chapter Chapter Eighteen|13 pages

Modernity, Post-modernity and Religious Belief

part VI|34 pages

Coping With Evil

chapter Chapter Nineteen|2 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter Twenty|14 pages

Moral Sensitivity and the Free Will Defence

chapter Chapter Twenty-One|6 pages

Are Theodicy Arguments Convincing?

chapter Chapter Twenty-Two|10 pages

On Thanking God Whatever Happens

part VII|58 pages

On The Nature of God

chapter Chapter Twenty-Three|2 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter Twenty-Four|22 pages

The God to Whom We Pray

chapter Chapter Twenty-Five|11 pages

Divine Impeccability

chapter Chapter Twenty-Six|12 pages

Farrer, Wiles and the Causal Joint

chapter Chapter Twenty-Seven|8 pages

Amicitia Dei

part VIII|66 pages

Prayer, Mysticism and Spirituality

chapter Chapter Twenty-Eight|2 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter Twenty-Nine|10 pages

Ora et Laboura

chapter Chapter Thirty|15 pages

Mysticism and Union with God

chapter Chapter Thirty-One|17 pages

Bernard, Calvin and the Freedom of the Will

chapter Chapter Thirty-Two|10 pages

Religious Belief and Personal Identity

chapter Chapter Thirty-Three|8 pages

Religious Models and Moral Principles

part IX|60 pages

Christian Doctrine and the Dialogue of Traditions

chapter Chapter Thirty-Four|3 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter Thirty-Five|16 pages

The Identity of the Christian Tradition

chapter Chapter Thirty-Six|16 pages

Atonement and Reconciliation

chapter Chapter Thirty-Seven|14 pages

Incarnation, the Trinity and Fellowship with God

chapter Chapter Thirty-Eight|8 pages

Dialogue and the Matrix of Faith

part X|42 pages

Philosophical Theology

chapter Chapter Thirty-Nine|2 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter Forty|19 pages

Philosophical Theology as Conceptual Recollection

chapter Chapter Forty-One|18 pages

The Inter-subjectivity of Criteria in Theology