Creedal Christianity through HIndu Eyes

Creedal Christianity through Hindu Eyes Timothy C. Tennent, PhD Professor and Chair of Methodist Divinity, Missions and World Christianity, Beeson Divinity School Why this paper submission fits into the ETS 2025 Theme of Creedal Christianity In The Story of Creeds and Confessions Donald Fairbairn and Ryan Reeves have made a convincing case that there is … Read more

Paradox Sensu Strictissimo: Kierkegaard on Jesus being God and Man

At the council of Nicea, the orthodox position defined Jesus Christ as “true God of true God, begotten, not made, of one substance with the Father . . . who for us humans and for our salvation descended and became incarnate, becoming human.” While squashing the controversy of Arianism, a new conundrum was clearly stated: … Read more

Meredith G. Kline’s Revision of Nicene Trinitarianism

In God, Heaven, and Har Magedon, Meredith G. Kline proposed an unconventional account of the relational order between the Son and the Holy Spirit. He argued that, in terms of the eternal generation of the Son, there is an inverted order within the Trinity—the procession of the Spirit precedes the filiation of the Son, and, … Read more

Does the Covenant of Redemption Undermine Classical Trinitarianism? No.

This paper demonstrates that the covenant of redemption, or pactum salutis, is consistent with classical Trinitarianism. In order to do so, the paper presents four contemporary evangelical theological challenges to the covenant of redemption with respect to what has been called classical trinitarianism. Whereas some, such as Paul Williamson, have challenged the exegetical foundation, and … Read more

A New Natural Theological Argument for the Trinity

NOTE: This proposal is being submitted to both ETS and EPS. While not accepting the more controversial aspects of his argument, J. P. Moreland and William Lane Craig embrace one feature of Richard Swinburne’s natural theological argument for the Trinity: that mutuality is an essential requirement of love. Accordingly, God’s being essentially all-loving entails that … Read more

Retrieving an ‘Orthodox’ Work of Christ from the Creed of Nicaea

Robert Jenson famously lamented the lack of fixed dogma on Christ’s atonement. Although the early church responded to trinitarian controversy regarding the person of Christ, with the First Council of Nicaea providing an initial ecumenical judgment, the work of Christ remained a flexible doctrine for centuries. When contrasting the Apostles’ Creed and the Creed of … Read more