Karl Rahner on the word “God” in the New Testament
A leading Roman Catholic scholar looks at the use of “God” in the New Testament.
A leading Roman Catholic scholar looks at the use of “God” in the New Testament.
“For the New Testament, as for the Hebrew Bible, the principle of unity is clearly the one God…”
How could the Incarnation continue between Good Friday and Easter Sunday?
What does it take to defend conciliar christology… and more?
Does the NT teach that Jesus is a man, or that he is a godman?
Its purpose is to equip you to think through these disputed theological and biblical issues. Appropriately, it’s again available in Three formats.
Would Origen agree with some present-day apologists who urge that Jesus and God are one and the same?
Want to debate (or just refute) me? Here are some things you should study.
Gregory of Nazianzus and John of Damascus held that the one God is the Trinity.
Can one be a trinitarian without believing in a tripersonal God?
“What bothers me most is the rhetorical move you’re making with this claim that everyone before Nicea (or so) was a ‘Unitarian.'”
Some friendly disagreements about the prodigal son, women in Luke, and the deity of Christ in Luke.
The first ever Jewish and Christian commentary on a biblical book.
The “extra Calvinisticum” and the coherence of Chalcedonian christology.
An evangelical author and blogger attempts a sort of primer on “the Trinity.”
When a NT author claims that Jesus fulfills an OT text which is about God, is that his way of saying that Jesus is God?
A conversation about the New Testament on God, Jesus, and worship.