توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب The History of Scottish Theology, Volume I: Celtic Origins to Reformed Orthodoxy
نام کتاب : The History of Scottish Theology, Volume I: Celtic Origins to Reformed Orthodoxy
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : تاریخ الهیات اسکاتلندی، جلد اول: ریشه های سلتیک تا ارتدکس اصلاح شده
سری :
نویسندگان : David Fergusson (editor), Mark W. Elliott (editor)
ناشر : Oxford University Press
سال نشر : 2019
تعداد صفحات : 402
ISBN (شابک) : 9780198759331 , 0198759339
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 2 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Cover\nThe History of Scottish Theology: Volume I: Celtic Origins to Reformed Orthodoxy\nCopyright\nAcknowledgements\nContents\nList of Contributors\n1: Scottish Theology: Contexts and Traditions\n Bibliography\n2: Theology in Scotland before Scholasticism\n Landscape\n Books\n Christian Practice\n An Agenda\n Bibliography\n3: Richard of St Victor\n Thought\n Benjamin Minor (The Twelve Patriarchs)\n Benjamin Major (The Mystical Ark)\n De Trinitate\n Innovations\n Influence\n Bibliography\n Primary Literature\n Secondary Literature\n4: Adam of Dryburgh\n Life\n Writings\n Sermones\n Liber de ordine, habitu et professione\n De triplice tabernaculo\n De triplici genere contemplationis\n Soliloquium de instructione animæ\n De quadripertito exercitium cellæ\n Importance and Influence\n Bibliography\n Primary Literature\n Secondary Literature\n5: Liturgical Theology before 1600\n What is Liturgical Theology?\n How Was It Practised in Scotland? In Education, Schools, Universities, Clergy Education, 1552 Catechism\n Alexander Galloway, a Theologian in Stone\n Catholic and Protestant Reform\n Reformed Liturgical Theology; Adamson, Bruce, and Ane Breif Gathering\n Ecumenical and Historiographical Implications\n Bibliography\n6: Duns Scotus\n Bibliography\n7: John Ireland and the Transformation of Scotist Theology\n Introduction\n Perfect-Being Theology\n Predestination, Grace, and Freedom\n Conclusion\n Bibliography\n Primary Literature\n Secondary Literature\n8: John Mair as Theologian\n The Person and his Work\n Mair’s Theological Works\n An Overview of Mair’s Theology\n The nature of theology\n The Christian God\n Jesus Christ\n Salvation\n Christian ethics\n Biblical Commentaries\n Conclusion\n Bibliography\n Primary Sources (John Mair)\n Secondary Sources\n9: Sixteenth-Century Philosophy and Theology after John Mair\n From Mair to Melville\n Scholasticism and Aristotelianism\n Melville and Rollock\n Academic Philosophy\n Conclusion\n Bibliography\n Primary Literature\n Secondary Literature\n10: John Knox and Andrew Melville\n Themes in the Theology of John Knox (1514/15–1572)\n Knox on Right and Wrong Worship\n Knox and the English Book of Common Prayer\n Knox and the Elect and the Reprobate\n History and the Covenanted People\n Knox as Prophet\n Knox’s Political Theology\n Context: From Knox’s Era to Melville’s\n Melville as Educator\n The ‘guid cause’\n ‘God’s sillie vassal’\n Knox and Melville: Philosophical Theologians?\n Bibliography\n Primary Literature\n Secondary Literature\n11: Political and Ecclesial Theology in the Sixteenth Century\n George Buchanan (1506–82)\n Quintin Kennedy (1520–64)\n Ninian Winzet (1518–52)\n Towards the End of the Century\n Bibliography\n12: The Bible in Sixteenth-Century Scotland\n The Bible before the Scottish Reformation\n The Origin of the Geneva Bible Trajectory\n English Editions of the Geneva Bible\n The Variety of Textual Forms\n The Advent of Junius’ Text of the Apocalypse\n A Strategy behind the Different Versions\n How Did This Apply to Scotland?\n The Advent of the King James Version\n The Characteristics of the Geneva Tradition\n Bibliography\n13: Habit and Belief in the Early Scottish Reformation\n Patrick Hamilton\n John Gau and John Johnsone\n Alexander Alesius\n Evangelical Theology at Court\n Henry Balnaves\n George Wishart\n A Legacy of Belief and Habit\n Bibliography\n Primary Literature\n Secondary Literature\n14: Reformed Theology in Confessions and Catechisms to c.1620\n Introduction\n Issues and Priorities in Scottish Public Theology\n Summary Texts in Scotland Illustrative of Reformed Theology\n Backdrop of Reformed Theology and Confessions\n Highlights of Scottish Confessional, Catechetical, and Teaching Material\n Afterword\n Bibliography\n15: Spiritual Theology in Bruce, Howie, Johnston, Boyd, and Leighton\n Robert Bruce (1554–1631)\n Robert Howie (1565–1641) and John Johnston (1565–1611)\n Robert Boyd (1578–1627)\n Robert Leighton (1611–84)\n Bibliography\n Primary Literature\n Secondary Literature\n16: Federal Theology from the Reformation to c.1677\n Bibliography\n Primary Literature\n Secondary Literature\n17: The Covenant Idea in Mid-Seventeenth-Century Scotland\n History of the Covenant Concept\n Covenant of Grace\n Covenant of Works\n Covenant of Redemption\n The Role of Experiential Religion\n Conclusion\n Bibliography\n Primary Literature\n Secondary Literature\n18: The Reformed Scholasticism of James Dundas\n Introduction\n James Dundas: His Life\n Scholasticism and Reformed Orthodoxy\n The Reformed Scholasticism of James Dundas’ Idea philosophiae moralis\n Bibliography\n19: The Theology of the Westminster Confession of Faith in its Context\n Historical and Theological Context\n That ‘Damnable Doctrine’: Antinomianism and Revising the Thirty-Nine Articles\n The Solemn League and Covenant and the Scottish Commissioners\n The Theology of the Westminster Confession of Faith\n The foundation: God’s Word\n God’s eternal decree\n Assurance of salvation\n Sin, creation, and covenant\n Justification and the law\n The role of the civil magistrate\n Conclusion\n Works Cited\n Primary Literature\n Secondary Literature\n20: The Aberdeen Doctors and Henry Scougal\n The Aberdeen Doctors\n The Doctors on ecclesiastical concord\n The Doctors on salvation and sacraments\n The Doctors on Scripture and tradition\n Henry Scougal\n Conclusion\n Bibliography\n Primary Literature\n Secondary Literature\n21: Episcopalian Spirituality: The Garden Brothers and Henry Scougal\n The Mystics of the North-East and Their Roots\n James Garden’s Quest for a ‘Pure and Peaceable Theology’\n Politics versus Devotion?\n George Garden’s ‘Dangerous and Blasphemous Opinions’\n The Aftermath\n Bibliography\n Manuscripts\n Primary Literature\n Secondary Literature\n22: Early Modern French and Dutch Connections\n Introduction\n Franco-Scottish Reformed Theological Links\n John Cameron\n Understanding the nature of early modern Franco-Scottish theological exchange\n Huguenots and covenanters\n Dutch–Scottish Reformed Theological Links\n Social context in the early modern Netherlands\n Dutch–Scottish links in early orthodoxy\n Dutch–Scottish links in high orthodoxy\n Dutch–Scottish links in late orthodoxy\n Conclusion\n Bibliography\n Primary Literature\n Secondary Literature\n23: Early Modern Jurisprudence and Theology\n Introduction\n Pre-Tridentine Canon Law in Scotland\n The Scottish Reformation and the Spiritual Jurisdiction\n The Spiritual Jurisdiction of the Courts of the Church of Scotland\n The Reform of Marriage Law\n Scottish Lawyers and the Early Protestant Ascendancy\n Protestantism and Law in Scotland\n Viscount Stair’s Institutions of the Law of Scotland\n Conclusion\n Bibliography\n24: The Marrow Controversy: Boston, Erskine, and Hadow\n The Controversy\n Interpreting the Controversy\n The Federal Foundations of the Marrow Controversy\n Differing Federal Structures\n A distinct Covenant of Redemption\n Immediate versus mediate graciousness\n Definite versus indefinite Covenant of Grace\n The Collision of Federal Systems\n The Marrow Controversy as a Federal Dispute\n Implications of the Analysis\n Conclusion\n Bibliography\n Primary Literature\n Secondary Literature\n25: Boundaries of Scottish Reformed Orthodoxy, 1560–1700\n Introduction\n Parameters of Scottish Reformed Religion\n Covenant and the Unity of Early Modern Scottish Theology\n From the Covenant of Works to a Twofold Covenant of Grace\n Restoration Recasting\n Reframing the Bonds\n Softening Demands\n Conclusion\n Bibliography\n Primary Literature\n Secondary Literature\nIndex of Names\nIndex of Subjects