Doyle, R. C. (Robert Colin) (1947-). Opening God's Word - Lecture 1. Moore Theological College. 2001. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, https://archives.moore.edu.au/documents/detail/224278.
APA citation style
Doyle, R. (2001). Opening God's Word - lecture 1. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, https://archives.moore.edu.au/documents/detail/224278.
Chicago citation style
Doyle, R. C. (Robert Colin) (1947-).Opening God's Word - Lecture 1. Moore Theological College. 2001. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, https://archives.moore.edu.au/documents/detail/224278.
Note:
These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.
Doyle explains the aims of the series 1. To show how the doctrine of the trinity is an exposition of the gospel 2. To demonstrate that with the doctrine of the trinity our understanding of the gospel becomes distorted 3. To show that the trinity is not the end point of theological construction, but is in a dialogical relationship with evangelical theology because it is the doctrine of God's own revelation about himself 4. To explore ways in which the trinitarian doctrine of God and his ways in the world my shed light on contemporary Australian culture and church practise. Overview 1. To explore the question of God, and what it means to know him. THe promises of the bible raise large expectations of the knowledge of God - how deep it is and what it does. God has uniquely revealed himself in Jesus. The church and society remind us that knowledge of God does not come easily. What is God's side of this? The role of God's promises. 1. Introduction - the promise and the problems 2. Access to the Father - to God 3. Knowing God from God's side 4. Consequences and challenges 5. So what? The general challenges 6. Conclusion 7. Postscript to witnesses 8. Application to evangelical theology
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