03688nam a2200193Ia 4500008004100000020002900041041001300070050003100083100002100114245012300135246007700258260004900335300002300384490004200407500010200449505285600551650006403407700002303471230916s9999 xx 000 0 und d a9781913282035 1913282031 achiheng aBX9479.B35 b.E455122 2020 aEglinton, James  0a三位一体和有机体 : b赫尔曼·巴文克的有机主旨新释 /c恩雅各 (James Eglinton) 著; 徐西面譯 a三位一體和有機體 : b赫爾曼·巴文克的有機主旨新釋 / aEdinburgh : b贤理·璀雅出版社,c2020 a265 p.b; c24 cm. aStudies in Dutch Neo-Calvinism Series aTranslation of : Trinity and Organism : Towards a New Reading of Herman Bavinck's Organic Motif. aTitle Page; Copyright Page; Dedication Page; Contents; Abstract; Acknowledgements; List of Abbreviations; Chapter 1: Where Was Herman Bavinck?; I. Who Was Herman Bavinck?; II. Late Eighteenth- and Early Nineteenth-Century Dutch Theology; III. Neo-Calvinism: Herman Bavinck and Abraham Kuyper; IV. 'The Brief Triumph of Neo-Confessionalism'; V. The Context of Reformed Dogmatics; Chapter 2: How Many Herman Bavincks?; I. Introduction1; II. Towards a New 'General' Reading of Bavinck; III. The 'Two' Bavincks; IV. The General Affects the Particular; V. The 'Two Bavincks' Model and the Organic Motif. VI. The 'One Bavinck': The Recent Direction of Bavinck StudiesVII. Two Speeches and the 'Two Bavincks'; VIII. Aeterni Patris, Common Grace and the Two Bavincks; IX. Biographical Interpretation; X. Bavinck's Identity Crisis; XI. Conclusion; Chapter 3: Bavinck's Organic Motif; I. Introduction; II. Veenhof's Account; III. Generalist Intellectual Histories of Organicism; IV. Engagement with Veenhof's Account; V. Veenhof and van Eck in Conversation; VI. Engagement with Mattson's Critique; VII. The Immediate Context of Bavinck's Organic Motif. VIII. Mechanism in Dutch Theology: Scholten and RauwenhoffIX. Bavinck's Definition of the 'Organic'; X. Bavinck on Cause and Effect; XI. The Organic Motif in Wider Neo-Calvinism; XII. Conclusion; Chapter 4: The Organic Motif and the Doctrine of God; I. Introduction; II. Bavinck, the Vestigia Trinitatis and the Organic Motif; III. The Triad and Unity-In-Diversity; IV. Structural Theology and the Doctrine of God; V. All Theology is the Doctrine of God; VI. Mysterious Dogmatics: Warm or Cold-Blooded; VII. One-Track Dogmatics: Thinking Pros Ton Theon; VIII. God and the Organism. IX. Part One: Unity and Diversity in the GodheadX. Part Two: The Christocentric, Ontological Relationship Between Creator and Creation151; XI. Conclusion: Bavinck as 'Worldview' Theologian; Chapter 5: The Organic Motif and General Revelation; I. Introduction; II. Bavinck's Doctrine of Revelation in Context; III. What is Revelation?; IV. Bavinck's 'Nee!' to Natural Revelation; V. General Revelation as Narrow And Broad; VI. General Revelation as Creation (Nature) and Providence (History); VII. Calvin, Scholten and Bavinck on God and Providence. VIII. The Disappearance and Reappearance of the Organic MotifIX. The Organic Character of General Revelation; Chapter 6: The Organic Motif and Scripture; I. Introduction; II. The 'Two Bavincks' Hypothesis and Scripture; III. Scripture as Organic; IV. An Initial Distinction; V. Studying Scripture at Leiden: Scholten and Kuenen; VI. Bavinck's Response to Leiden and Groningen on Scripture; VII. The Organic Inspiration of Scripture; VIII. Divine and Human Counterbalances; IX. Mechanical Inspiration; X. The Servant Form of Scripture; XI. The Organic Nature of Inspiration. aBavinck, Herman, 1854-1921 -- Theology.Theology, Doctrinal. a恩雅各徐西面