That things are not what they seem is an observation elicited frequently by a course of study in Roman Catholic dogma. At no point is this caution more necessary than in an attempt to comprehend the Roman Catholic idea of Grace and of the Means of Grace
Post-Tridentine Western Christian theology introduced the notion of natura pura, which holds that on...
John Barclay offers a capacious and helpful framework for reflection on large swathes of the history...
The concept of grace has, in the psychology of religion, been largely neglected as a legitimate topi...
That things are not what they seem is an observation elicited frequently by a course of study in Rom...
This three-part study examines the doctrine of grace in the light of the main approaches to the subj...
It is typical of much theology in the Catholic tradition to frame an understanding of humanity, and ...
There are evident traces of Neoplatonism in Roman theology, especially in the doctrines concerning m...
The topic which is here to be briefly treated, chiefly on the basis of a problem which has recently ...
When we speak of the means of grace, we have in mind certain divinely appointed media by which God e...
There is room for differences of opinion where the doctrine of the means of grace may be best discus...
Although the question of whether, in the thought of Thomas Aquinas, sanctifying grace is “created” o...
In moving into the Roman world, the first Christians encountered a secular culture whose social, pol...
To speak of grace according to a certain western philosophical tradition cannot fail to imply a cert...
Post-Tridentine Western Christian theology introduced the notion of natura pura, which holds that on...
John Barclay offers a capacious and helpful framework for reflection on large swathes of the history...
The concept of grace has, in the psychology of religion, been largely neglected as a legitimate topi...
That things are not what they seem is an observation elicited frequently by a course of study in Rom...
This three-part study examines the doctrine of grace in the light of the main approaches to the subj...
It is typical of much theology in the Catholic tradition to frame an understanding of humanity, and ...
There are evident traces of Neoplatonism in Roman theology, especially in the doctrines concerning m...
The topic which is here to be briefly treated, chiefly on the basis of a problem which has recently ...
When we speak of the means of grace, we have in mind certain divinely appointed media by which God e...
There is room for differences of opinion where the doctrine of the means of grace may be best discus...
Although the question of whether, in the thought of Thomas Aquinas, sanctifying grace is “created” o...
In moving into the Roman world, the first Christians encountered a secular culture whose social, pol...
To speak of grace according to a certain western philosophical tradition cannot fail to imply a cert...
Post-Tridentine Western Christian theology introduced the notion of natura pura, which holds that on...
John Barclay offers a capacious and helpful framework for reflection on large swathes of the history...
The concept of grace has, in the psychology of religion, been largely neglected as a legitimate topi...