There is an emerging consensus in contemporary theology that human finitude should be affirmed and that attempts to overcome the limitations of mortality, transience and finite human knowledge and power should be resisted. Nevertheless, the Christian tradition has maintained its hope for eternal life in the presence of God. The question which this essay therefore addresses is which aspects of human finitude (if any) will be overcome if the hope for eternal life is affirmed. Section two provides a brief overview of theological debates on human finitude. Section three then offers a brief introduction to theological discourse on time and eternity. In section four the contributions to theological reflection on eternity from German theologians s...
This thesis examines the relation of eternity and time in the theology of Karl Barth (1886-1968), sp...
Death has always been considered as an inevitable yet ‘’unpleasant’’ conclusion to one’s lifelong jo...
Death has always been considered as an inevitable yet ‘’unpleasant’’ conclusion to one’s lifelong jo...
There is an emerging consensus in contemporary theology that human finitude should be affirmed and t...
Does it make sense to think of eternal life not as an unending continuation of life subsequent to de...
Does it make sense to think of eternal life not as an unending continuation of life subsequent to de...
This paper discusses the relation between God's eternity and time. It begins with a discussion of th...
The human individual has been preoccupied with the phenomenon of death since death expresses the end...
Conditionalism is a religious concept met in the ancient Judaism dogma, but also in some old C...
While the natural immortality of the soul was debated (and largely rejected) in the mid-twentieth ce...
Between 1914 and 1945 a discussion took place amongst Christian and Jewish theologians and philosoph...
Responding to a well-known essay by Bernard Williams, philosophers (and a few theologians) have enga...
Starting from the assumption that 'time is the horizon of the meaning of Being' (Heidegger), Eternal...
This dissertation argues that Karl Barth's revelational and trinitarian language and logic of eterni...
Responding to a well-known essay by Bernard Williams, philosophers (and a few theologians) have enga...
This thesis examines the relation of eternity and time in the theology of Karl Barth (1886-1968), sp...
Death has always been considered as an inevitable yet ‘’unpleasant’’ conclusion to one’s lifelong jo...
Death has always been considered as an inevitable yet ‘’unpleasant’’ conclusion to one’s lifelong jo...
There is an emerging consensus in contemporary theology that human finitude should be affirmed and t...
Does it make sense to think of eternal life not as an unending continuation of life subsequent to de...
Does it make sense to think of eternal life not as an unending continuation of life subsequent to de...
This paper discusses the relation between God's eternity and time. It begins with a discussion of th...
The human individual has been preoccupied with the phenomenon of death since death expresses the end...
Conditionalism is a religious concept met in the ancient Judaism dogma, but also in some old C...
While the natural immortality of the soul was debated (and largely rejected) in the mid-twentieth ce...
Between 1914 and 1945 a discussion took place amongst Christian and Jewish theologians and philosoph...
Responding to a well-known essay by Bernard Williams, philosophers (and a few theologians) have enga...
Starting from the assumption that 'time is the horizon of the meaning of Being' (Heidegger), Eternal...
This dissertation argues that Karl Barth's revelational and trinitarian language and logic of eterni...
Responding to a well-known essay by Bernard Williams, philosophers (and a few theologians) have enga...
This thesis examines the relation of eternity and time in the theology of Karl Barth (1886-1968), sp...
Death has always been considered as an inevitable yet ‘’unpleasant’’ conclusion to one’s lifelong jo...
Death has always been considered as an inevitable yet ‘’unpleasant’’ conclusion to one’s lifelong jo...