The Christological Controversy

Summary
For more than thirty years, The Christological Controversy has been an essential text for courses in theology, church history, and early Christianity that seek to better understand the development of Christology from its earliest roots to the Council of Chalcedon in 451. The volume gives modern readers an idea entry point into the issues by presenting clear, fresh translations of the most important primary sources, along with simple and informative introductions to explain the context of the writings.
Similar Books
-
Christology of the Later Fathers
by Edward Rochie Hardy
-
Aquinas on Nature and Grace: Selections from the Summa Theologica
by Thomas Aquinas
-
Augustine: Later Works
by Augustine of Hippo
-
Zwingli and Bullinger
by Huldrych Zwingli
-
-
-
Early Latin Theology: Selections from Tertullian, Cyprian, Ambrose and Jerome
by Stanley L. Greenslade
-
Confessions/Enchiridion
by Augustine of Hippo
-
Bernard of Clairvaux
by G.R. Evans
-
The Wisdom of the Cross: Essays in Honor of John Howard Yoder
by Stanley Hauerwas
-
Advocates of Reform: From Wyclif to Erasmus
by Matthew Spinka
-
Interpreting Faith for the Modern Era
by Rudolf Karl Bultmann
-
-
Interpreting Faith for a Modern Era
by Rudolf Karl Bultmann
-
The Christianity Reader
by Mary Gerhart
-
Introduction to the Works of Bonaventure
by Jacques-Guy Bougerol
-
-
Newman & Conversion
by Ian Ker
-
The Ethics of World Religions and Human Rights
by Hans Küng
-
Concilium 192 Orthodoxy and Heterodoxy
by Johann Baptist Metz
-
Concilium 202: Music and the Experience of God
by David Power
-
Concilium 188 Synod 1985 An Evaluation
by Giuseppe Alberigo
-
Concilium 196: Christian Identity
by Christian Duquoc
-
Concilium 198 Diakonia Church for Others
by Norbert Greinacher
-
Concilium 178: Blessing and Power
by Mary Collins
-
Concilium 172: The Ethics of Liberation, the Liberation of Ethics
by Marcel Lefebure
-
Concilium 191: Changing Values and Virtues (Concilium
by Dietmar Mieth
-
Concilium 2001/2 The Return of the Just War
by Dietmar Mieth