From: Howard J. Van Till (hvantill@chartermi.net)
Date: Sun May 25 2003 - 17:35:23 EDT
>From: douglas.hayworth@perbio.com
> My earlier question to Howard asked for some sort of articulation of what
> this theology "looks like" in an affirmative/practical sense. I can
> understand that Howard himself may not be prepared to provide such a
> description, since he (Iike all of us) is still working through the issues
> himself. But can someone help to provide a summary description (i.e., NOT
> a critique) of this theology, including how it is understood by its
> proponents as being specifically Christian while not considering the
> resurrection to have occured in the ordinary, plain sense described in the
> Gospels?
It's always better to read original works, of course, but here are the names
of two historians of modern theology that I would trust for thoroughness and
fairness.
James C. Livingston, Modern Christian Thought, 2 volumes.
Gary Dorrien, The Making of American Liberal Theology, first 2 volumes of a
trilogy now available.
Howard Van Till
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