*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.
Review final details at checkout.
₹1784
₹2747
35% OFF
Paperback
All inclusive*
Qty:
1
About The Book
Description
Author
Description: Theologian poet public intellectual and clergyman Rowan Williams is one of the leading lights of contemporary British theology. He has published over twenty books and one hundred scholarly essays in a distinguished career as an academic theologian that culminated in his appointment as Lady Margaret Professor of Divinity at Oxford University. Williams left this post to serve in the Anglican Church first as Bishop of Monmouth then Archbishop of Wales before finally being enthroned in 2003 as the 104th Archbishop of Canterbury. In this collection of essays a talented younger generation of Australian theologians critically analyzes the themes that bind together Williamss theology. These sympathetic yet probing essays traverse the full breadth of Williamss work from his studies on Arius the Desert Fathers Hegel and Trinitarian theology to his more pastoral writings on spirituality sexuality politics and the Anglican Church. Endorsements: I read these essays with surprise and delight. This excellent collection of constructive critical essays are a tribute both to the richness of Rowan Williamss theology and the intellectual commitment discernment and fairness of their authors. Highly recommended. --Alister E. McGrath Professor of Theology Ministry and Education Kings College London. I welcome this book very warmly. It offers a thoughtful engaging and respectful--albeit critical--account of Rowan Williamss theology that does him justice. Even when disagreeing on crucial areas such as sexuality or war the contributors to this fresh and well-informed book show much affection and respect for Rowan Williams himself at this difficult time for Anglicanism. Would that all debates among Christians were conducted in a similar manner. --Robin Gill Michael Ramsey Professor of Modern Theology University of Kent Canterbury Neither setting Rowan Williamss work on an implausible pedestal nor dismissing it in caricature the essays that Matheson Russell has gathered engage the Archbishop in thoughtful and critical conversation. I found myself by turns intrigued delighted puzzled convicted and annoyed--but also repeatedly driven to think again about Williamss work and more importantly about the issues that his work explores. --Mike Higton Senior Lecturer in Theology University of Exeter About the Contributor(s): Matheson Russell is Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Auckland. He is the author of Husserl: A Guide for the Perplexed (2006) as well as essays on Heidegger phenomenology of religion and political theology.