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Can Evangelicals Learn from World Religions?

Jesus, Revelation and Religious Traditions

  • Paperback
  • 233 pages
  • Publisher: Intervarsity Press (IVP Academic)
  • 14 x 21 x 1.9 cm

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For evangelicals interested in interfaith dialogue

Addresses the challenge of understanding truth in religions

You will gain insights for meaningful conversations about faith

This book explores how evangelicals can engage with world religions.

  • A 2001 Christianity Today Award of Merit winner

"Arguably, the church's greatest challenge in the next century will be the problem of the scandal of particularity. More than ever before, Christians will need to explain why they follow Jesus and not the Buddha or Confucius or Krishna or Muhammed. But if, while relating their faith to the faiths, Christians treat non-Christian religions as netherworlds of unmixed darkness, the church's message will be a scandal not of particularity but of arrogant obscurantism.

"Recent evangelical introductions to the problem of other religions have built commendably on foundations laid by J. N. D. Anderson and Stephen Neill. Anderson and Neill opened up the "heathen" worlds to the evangelical West, showing that many non-Christians also seek salvation and have personal relationships with their gods. In the last decade Clark Pinnock and John Sanders have argued for an inclusivist understanding of salvation, and Harold Netland has shed new light on the question of truth in the religions. Yet no evangelicals have focused--as nonevangelicals Keith Ward, Diana Eck and Paul Knitter have done--on the revelatory value of truth in non-Christian religions. Anderson and Neill showed that there are limited convergences between Christian and non-Christian traditions, and Pinnock has argued that there might be truths Christians can learn from religious others. But as far as I know, no evangelicals have yet examined the religions in any sort of substantive way for what Christians can learn without sacrificing, as Knitter and John Hick do, the finality of Christ.

"This book is the beginning of an evangelical theology of the religions that addresses not the question of salvation but the problem of truth and revelation, and takes seriously the normative claims of other traditions. It explores the biblical propositions that Jesus is the light that enlightens every person (Jn 1:9) and that God has not left Himself without a witness among non-Christian traditions (Acts 14:17). It argues that if Saint Augustine learned from Neo-Platonism to better understand the gospel, if Thomas Aquinas learned from Aristotle to better understand the Scriptures, and if John Calvin learned from Renaissance humanism, perhaps evangelicals may be able to learn from the Buddha--and other great religious thinkers and traditions--things that can help them more clearly understand God's revelation in Christ. It is an introductory word in a conversation that I hope will go much further among evangelicals." (Gerald McDermott, in the introduction to Can Evangelicals Learn from World Religions?)

Can Evangelicals Learn from World Religions? and A New History of Redemption
A New History of RedemptionCan Evangelicals Learn from World Religions?

  • Title

    Can Evangelicals Learn from World Religions?

  • Author

    Gerald R McDermott

  • Book Format

    Paperback / softback

  • Publisher

    Intervarsity Press (IVP Academic)

  • Published

    October 2000

  • Weight

    273g

  • Page Count

    233

  • Dimensions

    14 x 21 x 1.9 cm

  • ISBN

    9780830822744

  • ISBN-10

    0830822747

  • Eden Code

    4451376

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