The Church in its first several centuries split on whether Christ saved everyone or only a few, Universalism versus Exclusivism. In the sixth century, the Church settled the issue seemingly—Universalism was heretical. Within a century, Universalism became peripheral, but never perished and today regains Christian acceptance. The history of Universalism and Exclusivism from their beginnings to the present is reviewed along with what provoked the dissonance—Scripture gives contradictory accounts of salvation’s extent. That is, Scripture clearly says everyone is ultimately saved and just as clearly that everyone is not. Each side, of course, can exegete the competing account out of contention, but none has done so so convincingly that Exc...
ANOTATION This work deals with the controversial issue of the salvation of non-Christians. Its purpo...
The author addresses the doctrinal affirmations of the universality of God’s salvific will and the n...
Ecumenical efforts should not aim to produce uniform doctrinal agreement but instead should promote ...
The Church in its first several centuries split on whether Christ saved everyone or only a few, Univ...
Within the Christian theology of religions one distinguishes three basic paradigms: exclusivism, inc...
Eternal life is an eternal fellowship, a communion of difference gathered into perfect oneness throu...
Within the Christian theology of religions one distinguishes three basic paradigms: exclusivism, inc...
In God’s Final Victory: A Comparative Philosophical Case for Universalism, we argue that for every v...
Even before Hegel, theology has had to face the true dialectical question: is Christianity the true ...
There is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven, given among men, by whic...
In Every Knee Should Bow, Steven Harmon explores the manner in which Clement of Alexandria (ca. 160-...
Abstract: Every religion offers salvation or liberation. Since the time of Cyprian of Carthage, the ...
The Great Reconciliation is truly the core and center of the entire system of Christian doctrine. Al...
Rom 5:18-19 raises a significant problem. Can the universal terms in these verses mean less than a u...
Although both views are completely orthodox in the Christian faith, I feel that the Reformed monergi...
ANOTATION This work deals with the controversial issue of the salvation of non-Christians. Its purpo...
The author addresses the doctrinal affirmations of the universality of God’s salvific will and the n...
Ecumenical efforts should not aim to produce uniform doctrinal agreement but instead should promote ...
The Church in its first several centuries split on whether Christ saved everyone or only a few, Univ...
Within the Christian theology of religions one distinguishes three basic paradigms: exclusivism, inc...
Eternal life is an eternal fellowship, a communion of difference gathered into perfect oneness throu...
Within the Christian theology of religions one distinguishes three basic paradigms: exclusivism, inc...
In God’s Final Victory: A Comparative Philosophical Case for Universalism, we argue that for every v...
Even before Hegel, theology has had to face the true dialectical question: is Christianity the true ...
There is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven, given among men, by whic...
In Every Knee Should Bow, Steven Harmon explores the manner in which Clement of Alexandria (ca. 160-...
Abstract: Every religion offers salvation or liberation. Since the time of Cyprian of Carthage, the ...
The Great Reconciliation is truly the core and center of the entire system of Christian doctrine. Al...
Rom 5:18-19 raises a significant problem. Can the universal terms in these verses mean less than a u...
Although both views are completely orthodox in the Christian faith, I feel that the Reformed monergi...
ANOTATION This work deals with the controversial issue of the salvation of non-Christians. Its purpo...
The author addresses the doctrinal affirmations of the universality of God’s salvific will and the n...
Ecumenical efforts should not aim to produce uniform doctrinal agreement but instead should promote ...