Jordan Daniel Wood lays out two possible understandings of David Hart's critique of his work on Maximus. He locates the central issue in Hart's depiction of nature, in which Hart would locate divinity but in which he would turn to the Person of Christ as uniting the natural and divine. Jonathan suggests that Bernard Lonergan's approach, dropping focus on nature but looking to human desire, may be a mediating understanding.
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The Centrality of Ephesians and Cosmic Salvation
Sermon: The Liberating Work of Salvation with Gregory of Nyssa
Practical Salvation in Ephesians
Sermon: Bonhoeffer’s Christocentrism as Rescue from the Beast of Empire
Beyond Luther to Paul Through Ephesians
Sermon: Jesus Reconciles Body and Soul and Masculine and Feminine
Tom Evans Explains Eastern Ancestral Sin and Compares it to Psychotheology
Sermon: Christ the Quintessential Jew
Sermon: Can Christianity Take Root in the United States?
LGBTQIA+ - A Remake
Sermon: Experiencing God
A Reflection on Our Conversation with Jordan Wood and his Departure from Hart
Sermon: Eternal Incarnation
UFOs and Theology with Ambrose Andreano
Sermon: The Resurrection Perspective
Sermon: Two Creations and True and False Incarnation
Marginalization and Restorative Justice with Jonathan Totty
Jordan Daniel Wood On His Departure From David Bentley Hart
Sermon: Philemon and the Abolition of the City of Man
Jordan Daniel Wood on Creation is Incarnation in Maximus the Confessor
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