
Incarnational Realism:: Trinity and the Spirit in Augustine and Barth: 21
Author(s): Travis E. Ables (Author)
- Publisher: Bloomsbury T&T Clark
- Publication Date: 20 Jun. 2013
- Language: English
- Print length: 320 pages
- ISBN-10: 056753605X
- ISBN-13: 9780567536051
Book Description
Editorial Reviews
Review
“All in all, Ables’s book is carefully researched, historically attuned, and written in clear prose. Scholars of Augustine, Barth, and Trinitarian theology, systematic theologians, and graduate students in theology will find the book informative and well worth their time, as will more advanced undergraduates.” –Cynthia R. Nielsen, University of Dallas, Anglican Theological Review
“In Incarnational Realism, Travis E. Ables offers an analysis of Augustine and Barth’s respective pneumatologies in order to counter this ‘standard narrative’ of a supposed trinitarian decline in Western and Augustinian theology … Much is to be commended in Ables’ work. He is a clear writer with a gift for lucid explanations of complex ideas and schools of thought. As such, the book is as helpful for demystifying contemporary trajectories in trinitarian theology as it is for analyzing the thought of Augustine and Barth … Ables’ volume is an important work for those interested in Augustine, Barth, and contemporary trajectories in trinitarian theology. Ables succeeds in presenting Augustine and Barth as exemplars of Western trinitarian thought at its best: namely, of God as a singular act of self-giving revealed in Christ and in which we participate through the Spirit. Both students and critics of Augustine and Barth will find much insight and value in this book.” –Luke Zerra, Center for Barth Studies
“Scholars of Augustine, students of Karl Barth, intellectual historians and systematic theologians are all indebted to Ables for this forceful yet elegant book.Writing with an intellectual marutirty and a scholarly grasp that is especially remarkable, ables plunges deeply and creatively into the thought of two great masters of Trinitarian speculation in order to uncover the all too often obscured or misread implications of their models for conceiving the personhood of the Holy Spirit.” —Paul DeHart, Vanderbilt University, USA
“This learned, wide-ranging, ad impressive study merits close attention.” —Paul Dafydd Jones, University of Virginia, USA
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