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Renewing the Evangelical Mission

Publisher:
, 2013
ISBN: 9780802869302
Logos Editions are fully connected to your library and Bible study tools.

$26.99

Digital list price: $33.99
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Overview

The “culture story” of evangelicalism during the second half of the twentieth century has been well told. It is important now to think about the theological mission of the church in an ever-increasing post-Christian and postpartisan context. What is the theologian’s calling at the beginning of the third millennium? How do global realities impact the mission of evangelical theology? What sense can be made of the unity of evangelical theology in light of its many diverse voices?

This collection of essays gathers a stellar roster of evangelical thinkers with significant institutional memory of the evangelical movement, who also see new opportunities for the evangelical voice in the years ahead.

In the Logos edition, this volume is enhanced by amazing functionality. Important terms link to dictionaries, encyclopedias, and a wealth of other resources in your digital library. Perform powerful searches to find exactly what you’re looking for. Take the discussion with you using tablet and mobile apps. With Logos Bible Software, the most efficient and comprehensive research tools are in one place, so you get the most out of your study.

Get more resources for theological studies with the Eerdmans Theological Studies Collection (19 vols.)

Resource Experts
  • Discusses the theological mission of the church
  • Explores how global realities impact the mission of evangelical theology
  • Offers new insights for the evangelical voice in the years ahead
  • “Human Flourishing” by Miroslav Volf
  • “Renewing Evangelical Identity from the Margins” by Tite Tiénou
  • “Ecumenical Realities and Evangelical Theology” by Mark A. Noll
  • “Mapping Evangelicalism: For the Sake of Mission in the Twenty-first Century” by Rodney L. Petersen
  • “Found Faithful: Standing Fast in Faith in the Advanced Modern Era” by Os Guinness
  • “The Return to Catechesis: Lessons from the Great Tradition” by J. I. Packer with Gary A. Parrett
  • “The Church after Evangelicalism” by Michael S. Horton
  • “A Post-Partisan Partisan Ecclesiology” by Richard Lints
  • “Renewal of Evangelical Theology: The Contribution of David F. Wells” by Cornelius Plantinga Jr.
  • “Interpreting Scripture between the Rock of Biblical Studies and the Hard Place of Systematic Theology: The State of the Evangelical (dis)Union” by Kevin J. Vanhoozer
  • “Can We Say Very Much? Evangelicals, Emergents, and the Problem of God-Talk” by Adonis Vidu
  • “The Only Mediator: The Person and Work of Christ in Evangelical Perspective” by Bruce L. McCormack

Top Highlights

“some ancient Stoics believed that one can flourish equally well on the torture rack as in the comfort of one’s home” (Page 15)

Projecting from earlier work by David Wells, Mark Noll, and Cornelius Plantinga, this important collection of essays attempts to prescribe the way forward for the disparate movement called evangelicalism. This is not the sort of book that marshals a wide swath of readers to agree with everything it says; rather, it is so consistently stimulating and provocative that no reader will agree with everything and all readers will come away with horizons enlarged and understanding deepened. Ignore this book and you will be impoverished; wrestle with it and you will be enriched.

D. A. Carson, research professor of New Testament, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School

For several decades, evangelical scholars have engaged their tradition largely, and often brilliantly, from the vantage point of heirs taking the measure of a rich but tangled inheritance. Following the lead of David Wells, the authors in this superb volume write not as observers but as agents who seek to promote renewal through critical engagement and constructive theological response. From beginning to end, the chapters in this rich and bracing book chart a promising course for Christian witness and evangelical renewal in our global era.

—Roger Lundin, Arthur F. Holmes Professor of Faith and Learning, Wheaton College

This engaging volume outlines the most pressing issues facing evangelical identity and mission. Self-critical yet forward-looking, the contributors to Renewing the Evangelical Mission offer analyses that are not only historically and sociologically sensitive but also refreshingly theological in character. This is a fitting tribute both to the work of David Wells and to the complexity and diversity of the global evangelical movement in the twenty-first century.

—Eric Gregory, professor of religion, Princeton University

Dr. Lints has overlapping interests in systematic theology, Biblical theology, philosophy and cultural studies. He has authored the Fabric of Theology, co-authored 101 Terms in Philosophy for Theology Students, edited the collection of essays, Personal Identity in Theological Perspective, and has a forthcoming work entitled, Radical Ironies: Religion, the 1960s and the Dawn of the Postmodern World. Dr Lints joined the Gordon-Conwell faculty in 1986. He has also taught at Trinity College (Bristol, UK) Notre Dame, Yale Divinity School and Gordon College. Dr. Lints is an ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church in America. He has been a church planter and served in a variety of other pastoral positions in churches. He and his wife, Ann, reside in Boxborough, Massachusetts, and have three children, Catherine, Sarah and Lucas.

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    $26.99

    Digital list price: $33.99
    Save $7.00 (20%)