Acknowledgements.
Preface.
Prologue.
1. Defining the Enterprise.
Theological Integrity.
The Unity of Christian Truth.
The Judgement of the World.
The Discipline of Scripture.
2. The Act of God.
On Being Creatures.
Beginning with the Incarnation.
The Finality of Christ.
Word and Spirit.
3. The Grammar of God.
Trinity and Revelation.
Trinity and Ontology.
Trinity and Pluralism.
4. Making Signs.
Between the Cherubim: the Empty Tomb and the Empty Throne.
The Nature of a Sacrament.
Sacraments of the New Society.
5. Living the Mystery.
Incarnation and the Renewal of Community.
Interiority and Epiphany: a Reading in New Testament Ethics.
Resurrection and Peace: More on New Testament Ethics.
'Nobody Knows Who I Am Till the Judgement Morning'.
Index.
Rowan Williams was enthroned as Archbishop of Canterbury in February 2003. His previous positions include Archbishop of Wales, Lady Margaret Professor of Divinity, Oxford and Dean of Clare College, Cambridge. He has taught theology for more than fifteen years in five continents, worked as a parish priest, and published widely. His previous publications include Teresa of Avila (1991), Open to Judgment (1994) and Sergi Bulgakov (1999).
"I believe Rowan Williams is one of the most creative and profound
theologians writing in the latter half of the twentieth century.
There is extraordinary significance to bringing together many of
these essays into one book which makes them available to a wider
public." L. Gregory Jones, Duke University
"A sustained and remarkably coherent essay on the daunting task of
doing theology today. They again show him to be a theologian of
immense erudition and maturity, and, perhaps more importantly, of
fine sensitivity to the subterfuges of human frailty."Times
Literary Supplement
"It is certainly a thought-provoking book; and if it gets people
thinking honestly and deeply about the problems it discusses, then
I am sure its author will be satisfied." Church Times
"Few contemporary theologians could offer such an exhilarating,
authoritative and properly demanding exploration of what it means
to do Christian theology. A companion volume on Christian ethics
would be more than welcome." Nicholas Sagovsky, University of
Newcastle.
"Rowan Williams speaks out of a fund of learning and pastoral
experience which has made him arguably the most distinguished
theologian in the English-speaking world. In Williams' hands the
language of finality and universal significance gains unexpected
energy." The Way.
"[On Christian Theology] exhibits a distinctive theological
posture...having remarkable and deep internal coherence. His terms
of engagement do not so much incite challenge and response as
provoke fresh and more supple thinking of one's own. And that
provocation is accompanied by the intense esthetic satisfaction of
being drawn into the intellectual dance of so nimble and inventive
a theological sensibility." David H. Kelsey, Yale Divinity
School.
"The range of these essays, the importance of the subjects they
treat, and, of course, Williams's erudition all mean that these
essays will need to be taken seriously. A wide range of readers
will owe Williams a debt of gratitude for the scatter of
characteristically brilliant insights in these essays." The
Heythrop Journal
"All in all, this is a valuable and stumulating book - one to which
the reader will want to return." Studies in World Christianity
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