Comparative Theology Essays for Keith Ward

Comparative Theology Essays for Keith Ward by Timothy W. Bartel is published by SPCK in 2003 and comprises 208 pages. This book focuses on Keith Ward’s exploration of comparative theology, a method where scholars with differing worldviews collaboratively investigate concepts such as ultimate reality and the human goal.
Readers will find essays that delve into central themes of Ward’s work, including revelation, creation, human nature, and community. The text presents a scholarly examination of these topics, contributing to the discourse in religion, philosophy, and Christian theology. This first edition invites readers to engage with the complexities of theological scholarship through a comparative lens.
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Keith Ward’s great contribution to theological scholarship is his exploration of what he calls comparative theology. He describes this as, a way of doing theology in which scholars holding different world-views share together in the investigation of concepts of ultimate reality, the final human goal, and the way to achieve it. This book is devoted to that theme with essays on the central topics of his mature work: revelation, creation, human nature and community.
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