Matches in Harvard for { ?s ?p Chapter 1: The wisdom literature, the documents of Hebrew humanism. God as Creator and the emergent problems -- The sense in which the wisdom literature may be called the documents of Hebrew humanism -- The origin of this humanism; the international character of the wisdom-(maxim)-writings -- 1. God as Creator; individualistic and universalistic thought -- 2. The question of divine and human responsibility; theodicy -- The contribution of the Wisdom-writings to theodicy -- the limitations of human reason -- Luther, Calvin, Kant -- The probationary and pedagogical theories of suffering -- The question: When evil derives? Satan -- dualistic thought -- The nature of man; Sirach and the evil propensity; man's free-will; the doctrine of predestination -- The influence of Judaism on Christian theodicy; St. Augustine's teaching of free-will. The source of sin not in matter but in the will. Exculpating the Creator -- . }
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- catalog description "Chapter 1: The wisdom literature, the documents of Hebrew humanism. God as Creator and the emergent problems -- The sense in which the wisdom literature may be called the documents of Hebrew humanism -- The origin of this humanism; the international character of the wisdom-(maxim)-writings -- 1. God as Creator; individualistic and universalistic thought -- 2. The question of divine and human responsibility; theodicy -- The contribution of the Wisdom-writings to theodicy -- the limitations of human reason -- Luther, Calvin, Kant -- The probationary and pedagogical theories of suffering -- The question: When evil derives? Satan -- dualistic thought -- The nature of man; Sirach and the evil propensity; man's free-will; the doctrine of predestination -- The influence of Judaism on Christian theodicy; St. Augustine's teaching of free-will. The source of sin not in matter but in the will. Exculpating the Creator -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "Chapter 1: The wisdom literature, the documents of Hebrew humanism. God as Creator and the emergent problems -- The sense in which the wisdom literature may be called the documents of Hebrew humanism -- The origin of this humanism; the international character of the wisdom-(maxim)-writings -- 1. God as Creator; individualistic and universalistic thought -- 2. The question of divine and human responsibility; theodicy -- The contribution of the Wisdom-writings to theodicy -- the limitations of human reason -- Luther, Calvin, Kant -- The probationary and pedagogical theories of suffering -- The question: When evil derives? Satan -- dualistic thought -- The nature of man; Sirach and the evil propensity; man's free-will; the doctrine of predestination -- The influence of Judaism on Christian theodicy; St. Augustine's teaching of free-will. The source of sin not in matter but in the will. Exculpating the Creator -- ".