ABSTRACT

Forsaking the Fall argues along exegetical, theological, and philosophical lines that the doctrines of the Fall and Original Sin need not be understood as integral components of orthodox Christianity.

By engaging biblical studies, systematic theology, and analytic philosophy, the book provides a comprehensive understanding of the most important issues at play in the Original Sin debate, as well as offers a set of tools for helping readers to think critically about the essence of the Christian faith and its relation to Original Sin. Crucially, it lays the theoretical groundwork for an orthodox nonlapsarianism and advances a novel theory vis-à-vis the Fall and Original Sin in Christian theology.

This innovative and provocative book will be of interest to scholars of theology and philosophy, specifically analytic theologians and philosophers of religion.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

part I|80 pages

The Fall and Original Sin in Scripture and Tradition

chapter 121|31 pages

Original Sin

A Historical and Theological Retrieval

chapter 3|23 pages

Romans 5:12–21

Adam or Christ?

part II|96 pages

Orthodoxy without Original Sin?

chapter 924|21 pages

Sin

The Biblical Understanding

chapter 5|20 pages

Concerning a Nonlapsarian Theodicy

Whence Sin?

chapter 6|24 pages

Salvation

Means and End

chapter 7|23 pages

On Orthodoxy

chapter 8|6 pages

Conclusion