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The Humility of the Eternal Son: Reformed Kenoticism and the Repair of Chalcedon: 18 (Current Issues in Theology, Series Number 18)

The Humility of the Eternal Son: Reformed Kenoticism and the Repair of Chalcedon: 18 (Current Issues in Theology, Series Number 18)

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Bruce Lindley McCormack
Cambridge University Press, 9/16/2021
EAN 9781316518298, ISBN10: 1316518299

Hardcover, 350 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 2.5 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English

The Chalcedonian Definition of 451 never completely resolved one of the critical issues at the heart of Christianity: the unity of the 'person' of Christ. In this eagerly-awaited volume - the result of deep and sustained reflection - distinguished theologian Bruce Lindley McCormack examines the reasons for this philosophical and theological failure. His book serves as a critical history that traces modern attempts at resolution of this problem, from the nineteenth-century Lutheran emphasis on Kenoticism (or the 'self-emptying' of the Son in order to be receptive to the will of the Father) to post-Barthian efforts that evade the issue by collapsing the second person of the Trinity into the human Jesus - thereby rejecting altogether the logic of the classical 'two-natures' Christology. McCormack shows how New Testament Christologies both limit and authorize ontological reflection, and in so doing offers a distinctively Reformed version of Kenoticism. Proposing a new and bold divine ontology, with a convincing basis in Christology, he persuasively argues that the unity of the 'person' is in fact guaranteed by the Son's act of taking into his 'being' the lived existence of Jesus.

I. A Critical History of Kenotic Christologies and their Antecedents
An Overview
1. Chalcedon and its legacy
2. Self-emptying
as either depotentiation or divestment
the failure of nineteenth centure Kenoticism to repair Chalcedon
3. Divine Kenosis as proper to the Eternal Son
Barth, Bulgakov and von Balthasar
4. The Post-Barthian temptation
collapse of the Eternal Son into Jesus and surrender of an immanent trinity in protology
II. Returning to Holy Scripture
5. The self-humiliating God in Paul's theology (and in Hebrews)
6. The Christological subject in the synoptics and in John
III. Repairing Chalcedon
7. Towards a reformed version of Kenotic Christology
8. Looking forward.