Matches in Harvard for { <http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/000985802/catalog> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 25 of
25
with 100 items per page.
- catalog contributor b1586977.
- catalog created "1924.".
- catalog date "1924".
- catalog date "1924.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1924.".
- catalog description "Chapter I. Is Christianity outgrown? -- The question -- I. Christianity and creative epochs -- II. The darker side of progress -- III. Can creative forces be rightly used? -- IV. The answer of fundamentalists -- V. Christianity more than its dogmas -- The hope of modernism -- Chapter II. What is modernism? -- The use of the term -- I. The two social minds in Christianity -- II. Modernism as presented by its opponents -- III. The real nature of modernism -- 1. A phase of scientific struggle for freedom in thought and belief -- 2. Modernists' acceptance of the results of science -- 3. The application of scientific method in the study of the Bible and religion -- 4. The application of Christianity to social problems -- 5. The justification of Christian faith by a knowledge of other realities -- 6. The evangelicalism of the scientific mind -- Chapter III. Modernism and the Bible -- Introduction -- I. The use of criticism -- II. What the Bible is -- III. Reliance upon method -- ".
- catalog description "Chapter VIII. Jesus and human needs -- I. Christ in the modern world -- II. Loyalty to Christ involves the acceptance of his teachings -- III. Jesus as met in the continuous Christian community he founded -- IV. Biographical contribution of Jesus to Christianity -- V. Resurrection of Jesus -- VI. Significance of the death of Jesus -- VII. Jewish eschatology as a pattern for the permanent Christian hope -- VIII. Need of faith -- Chapter IX. Affirmation of faith -- Convictions beneath attitudes -- I. A doctrinal system not the aim of modernism -- What it is to be Christian -- II. What convictions the modernist would express -- III. A religion of action rather than an orthodoxy demanded by our day -- IV. A possible credo for modernists -- V. Conclusion.".
- catalog description "III. The modernist's estimate of the saving influence of the Christian community as more than theological -- IV. Modernist's view of sin -- V. Social aspects of sin and salvation -- Chapter VI. Growing faith in God -- Daring of the Christian faith in God -- I. Historical influence in the development of the Christian doctrine of God -- II. Need of new patterns for expressing the permanent elements in these doctrines -- III. How does God reveal his presence in the cosmos? Miracles -- IV. God as father -- Chapter VII. Jesus Christ the revealer of a saving God -- Jesus the centre of his religion -- I. Jesus according the oldest sources and history -- II. Jesus' estimate of himself and his work of salvation -- III. Changes in exposition of the meaning of Jesus -- IV. Permanent and functional elements in this development -- The Nicean creed -- V. Accounting for the power of the Christ -- Virgin birth -- VI. Real basis of trust in Jesus as a revelation of God -- ".
- catalog description "IV. The Bible as the product and record of a developing religion -- Chapter IV. Christian convictions and doctrinal patterns -- The permanent and temporary elements in Christianity -- I. The continuous Christian group the object of study -- II. Convictions and attitudes vs. patterns -- III. Theology and social psychology -- IV. Doctrines as the outgrowth of historical situations -- V. The relation of doctrines to permanent convictions of the Christian movement -- 1. Theology is functional -- 2. Discussion as a means of socializing doctrinal patterns -- 3. Use of different patterns to express the same conviction -- VI. Christianity breeds true to itself -- VII. The controlling convictions of the Christian movement -- VIII. The modernist's purpose to preserve these convictions -- Chapter V. Christianity as a religion of salvation -- Can the world be saved? -- I. Our need of God's aid -- II. Sin and salvation -- ".
- catalog extent "vii p., [1] l., 182 p.".
- catalog hasFormat "Faith of modernism.".
- catalog isFormatOf "Faith of modernism.".
- catalog issued "1924".
- catalog issued "1924.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "New York, The Macmillan company,".
- catalog relation "Faith of modernism.".
- catalog subject "BT78 .M39".
- catalog subject "Modernism (Christian theology)".
- catalog tableOfContents "Chapter I. Is Christianity outgrown? -- The question -- I. Christianity and creative epochs -- II. The darker side of progress -- III. Can creative forces be rightly used? -- IV. The answer of fundamentalists -- V. Christianity more than its dogmas -- The hope of modernism -- Chapter II. What is modernism? -- The use of the term -- I. The two social minds in Christianity -- II. Modernism as presented by its opponents -- III. The real nature of modernism -- 1. A phase of scientific struggle for freedom in thought and belief -- 2. Modernists' acceptance of the results of science -- 3. The application of scientific method in the study of the Bible and religion -- 4. The application of Christianity to social problems -- 5. The justification of Christian faith by a knowledge of other realities -- 6. The evangelicalism of the scientific mind -- Chapter III. Modernism and the Bible -- Introduction -- I. The use of criticism -- II. What the Bible is -- III. Reliance upon method -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "Chapter VIII. Jesus and human needs -- I. Christ in the modern world -- II. Loyalty to Christ involves the acceptance of his teachings -- III. Jesus as met in the continuous Christian community he founded -- IV. Biographical contribution of Jesus to Christianity -- V. Resurrection of Jesus -- VI. Significance of the death of Jesus -- VII. Jewish eschatology as a pattern for the permanent Christian hope -- VIII. Need of faith -- Chapter IX. Affirmation of faith -- Convictions beneath attitudes -- I. A doctrinal system not the aim of modernism -- What it is to be Christian -- II. What convictions the modernist would express -- III. A religion of action rather than an orthodoxy demanded by our day -- IV. A possible credo for modernists -- V. Conclusion.".
- catalog tableOfContents "III. The modernist's estimate of the saving influence of the Christian community as more than theological -- IV. Modernist's view of sin -- V. Social aspects of sin and salvation -- Chapter VI. Growing faith in God -- Daring of the Christian faith in God -- I. Historical influence in the development of the Christian doctrine of God -- II. Need of new patterns for expressing the permanent elements in these doctrines -- III. How does God reveal his presence in the cosmos? Miracles -- IV. God as father -- Chapter VII. Jesus Christ the revealer of a saving God -- Jesus the centre of his religion -- I. Jesus according the oldest sources and history -- II. Jesus' estimate of himself and his work of salvation -- III. Changes in exposition of the meaning of Jesus -- IV. Permanent and functional elements in this development -- The Nicean creed -- V. Accounting for the power of the Christ -- Virgin birth -- VI. Real basis of trust in Jesus as a revelation of God -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "IV. The Bible as the product and record of a developing religion -- Chapter IV. Christian convictions and doctrinal patterns -- The permanent and temporary elements in Christianity -- I. The continuous Christian group the object of study -- II. Convictions and attitudes vs. patterns -- III. Theology and social psychology -- IV. Doctrines as the outgrowth of historical situations -- V. The relation of doctrines to permanent convictions of the Christian movement -- 1. Theology is functional -- 2. Discussion as a means of socializing doctrinal patterns -- 3. Use of different patterns to express the same conviction -- VI. Christianity breeds true to itself -- VII. The controlling convictions of the Christian movement -- VIII. The modernist's purpose to preserve these convictions -- Chapter V. Christianity as a religion of salvation -- Can the world be saved? -- I. Our need of God's aid -- II. Sin and salvation -- ".
- catalog title "The faith of modernism, by Shailer Mathews...".
- catalog type "text".