Engaging Nicene Trinitarianism
Historical Analysis, Theological Exploration, and Contemporary Relevance
Herausgeber: Grebe, Matthias; Schlenker, Christian; Hamilton, Nadine
Engaging Nicene Trinitarianism
Historical Analysis, Theological Exploration, and Contemporary Relevance
Herausgeber: Grebe, Matthias; Schlenker, Christian; Hamilton, Nadine
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Produktdetails
- Verlag: T&T Clark
- Seitenzahl: 286
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. September 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 596g
- ISBN-13: 9780567720764
- ISBN-10: 0567720764
- Artikelnr.: 73985639
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Matthias Grebe is Centre Lead and Lecturer at St. Mellitus College, UK. He is also Associate Vicar of St Edward, King and Martyr in Cambridge and the Church of England's Adviser for European Church Relations at Lambeth Palace. Nadine Hamilton is Akademische Rätin and teaches Systematic Theology at the Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nurnberg, Germany. Christian Schlenker is Assistant Professor of Theological Ethics at the University of Geneva, Switzerland.
Introduction (Matthias Grebe, St Mellitus College, UK; Nadine Hamilton,
University of Regensburg, Germany; Christian Schlenker, University of
Tübingen, Germany)
I. Historical Analysis
1. Interpreting Nicaea: Historical and Contemporary Contexts (John Behr,
University of Aberdeen, UK)
2. One in Being as One in Goodness: Re-reading Nicaea with a Third-Century
Interprative Key (Pui Him Ip, University of Cambridge, UK)
3. Arguing with St Basil about Taxis: On Modern Agreements About Fixing
Nicene Pneumatology (Isaac Frisby, University of Durham, UK)
4. The Reception of the Creed of Nicaea-Constantinople in the
Christological Controversy (David Burkhard Janssen, University of Tübingen,
Germany)
II. Theological Exploration
5. The Procession of the Holy Spirit: Revisiting the Filioque through the
Intra-Trinitarian Relations of Origin and Economic Missions (Matthias
Grebe, St Mellitus College, UK)
6. The Filioque Controversy: A Historical and Theological Analysis from the
Perspective of Vladimir Lossky (Tijana Petkovic, University of Tübingen,
Germany)
7. From One to Three? The Viability of Emergent Social Trinitarianism
(Johannes Grössl, University of Paderborn, Germany)
8. Re-Orientating 'Ontological Receptivity': Grounding the Son's
Receptivity to the Human Jesus on Passive Generation (Alex Irving, St
Mellitus College, UK)
III. Contemporary Relevance
9. The Relevance of the Nicene Creed (Christian Schlenker, University of
Geneva, Switzerland)
10. An Ontology of God's Threefold Name: Rediscovering Christological
Foundations (Nadine Hamilton, University of Regensburg, Germany)
11. Trinity and Empathy: The Modern Renewal of Trinitarian Ontology and the
Experience of Empathy in the Phenomenology of Edith Stein (Katrin König,
Heidelberg University, Germany).
12. Believing in One God: The Nicene Creed and the Shema (Mark W. Scarlata,
St Mellitus College, UK)
Cumulative Bibliography
Index
University of Regensburg, Germany; Christian Schlenker, University of
Tübingen, Germany)
I. Historical Analysis
1. Interpreting Nicaea: Historical and Contemporary Contexts (John Behr,
University of Aberdeen, UK)
2. One in Being as One in Goodness: Re-reading Nicaea with a Third-Century
Interprative Key (Pui Him Ip, University of Cambridge, UK)
3. Arguing with St Basil about Taxis: On Modern Agreements About Fixing
Nicene Pneumatology (Isaac Frisby, University of Durham, UK)
4. The Reception of the Creed of Nicaea-Constantinople in the
Christological Controversy (David Burkhard Janssen, University of Tübingen,
Germany)
II. Theological Exploration
5. The Procession of the Holy Spirit: Revisiting the Filioque through the
Intra-Trinitarian Relations of Origin and Economic Missions (Matthias
Grebe, St Mellitus College, UK)
6. The Filioque Controversy: A Historical and Theological Analysis from the
Perspective of Vladimir Lossky (Tijana Petkovic, University of Tübingen,
Germany)
7. From One to Three? The Viability of Emergent Social Trinitarianism
(Johannes Grössl, University of Paderborn, Germany)
8. Re-Orientating 'Ontological Receptivity': Grounding the Son's
Receptivity to the Human Jesus on Passive Generation (Alex Irving, St
Mellitus College, UK)
III. Contemporary Relevance
9. The Relevance of the Nicene Creed (Christian Schlenker, University of
Geneva, Switzerland)
10. An Ontology of God's Threefold Name: Rediscovering Christological
Foundations (Nadine Hamilton, University of Regensburg, Germany)
11. Trinity and Empathy: The Modern Renewal of Trinitarian Ontology and the
Experience of Empathy in the Phenomenology of Edith Stein (Katrin König,
Heidelberg University, Germany).
12. Believing in One God: The Nicene Creed and the Shema (Mark W. Scarlata,
St Mellitus College, UK)
Cumulative Bibliography
Index
Introduction (Matthias Grebe, St Mellitus College, UK; Nadine Hamilton,
University of Regensburg, Germany; Christian Schlenker, University of
Tübingen, Germany)
I. Historical Analysis
1. Interpreting Nicaea: Historical and Contemporary Contexts (John Behr,
University of Aberdeen, UK)
2. One in Being as One in Goodness: Re-reading Nicaea with a Third-Century
Interprative Key (Pui Him Ip, University of Cambridge, UK)
3. Arguing with St Basil about Taxis: On Modern Agreements About Fixing
Nicene Pneumatology (Isaac Frisby, University of Durham, UK)
4. The Reception of the Creed of Nicaea-Constantinople in the
Christological Controversy (David Burkhard Janssen, University of Tübingen,
Germany)
II. Theological Exploration
5. The Procession of the Holy Spirit: Revisiting the Filioque through the
Intra-Trinitarian Relations of Origin and Economic Missions (Matthias
Grebe, St Mellitus College, UK)
6. The Filioque Controversy: A Historical and Theological Analysis from the
Perspective of Vladimir Lossky (Tijana Petkovic, University of Tübingen,
Germany)
7. From One to Three? The Viability of Emergent Social Trinitarianism
(Johannes Grössl, University of Paderborn, Germany)
8. Re-Orientating 'Ontological Receptivity': Grounding the Son's
Receptivity to the Human Jesus on Passive Generation (Alex Irving, St
Mellitus College, UK)
III. Contemporary Relevance
9. The Relevance of the Nicene Creed (Christian Schlenker, University of
Geneva, Switzerland)
10. An Ontology of God's Threefold Name: Rediscovering Christological
Foundations (Nadine Hamilton, University of Regensburg, Germany)
11. Trinity and Empathy: The Modern Renewal of Trinitarian Ontology and the
Experience of Empathy in the Phenomenology of Edith Stein (Katrin König,
Heidelberg University, Germany).
12. Believing in One God: The Nicene Creed and the Shema (Mark W. Scarlata,
St Mellitus College, UK)
Cumulative Bibliography
Index
University of Regensburg, Germany; Christian Schlenker, University of
Tübingen, Germany)
I. Historical Analysis
1. Interpreting Nicaea: Historical and Contemporary Contexts (John Behr,
University of Aberdeen, UK)
2. One in Being as One in Goodness: Re-reading Nicaea with a Third-Century
Interprative Key (Pui Him Ip, University of Cambridge, UK)
3. Arguing with St Basil about Taxis: On Modern Agreements About Fixing
Nicene Pneumatology (Isaac Frisby, University of Durham, UK)
4. The Reception of the Creed of Nicaea-Constantinople in the
Christological Controversy (David Burkhard Janssen, University of Tübingen,
Germany)
II. Theological Exploration
5. The Procession of the Holy Spirit: Revisiting the Filioque through the
Intra-Trinitarian Relations of Origin and Economic Missions (Matthias
Grebe, St Mellitus College, UK)
6. The Filioque Controversy: A Historical and Theological Analysis from the
Perspective of Vladimir Lossky (Tijana Petkovic, University of Tübingen,
Germany)
7. From One to Three? The Viability of Emergent Social Trinitarianism
(Johannes Grössl, University of Paderborn, Germany)
8. Re-Orientating 'Ontological Receptivity': Grounding the Son's
Receptivity to the Human Jesus on Passive Generation (Alex Irving, St
Mellitus College, UK)
III. Contemporary Relevance
9. The Relevance of the Nicene Creed (Christian Schlenker, University of
Geneva, Switzerland)
10. An Ontology of God's Threefold Name: Rediscovering Christological
Foundations (Nadine Hamilton, University of Regensburg, Germany)
11. Trinity and Empathy: The Modern Renewal of Trinitarian Ontology and the
Experience of Empathy in the Phenomenology of Edith Stein (Katrin König,
Heidelberg University, Germany).
12. Believing in One God: The Nicene Creed and the Shema (Mark W. Scarlata,
St Mellitus College, UK)
Cumulative Bibliography
Index







