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Confessional Lutheran Dogmatics
Volume I
Christology
By David P. Scaer
Contents
Preface
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Christology in the Post-Enlightenment Era
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Past and Present Christological Controversies
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The Preexistence and Incarnation of the Son of God
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The Virgin Birth of Christ
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Christology in the Preaching of Jesus
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The Implications of the Personal Union: The Offices
of Christ and the Communication of Attributes
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The Sacrificial Death of Christ
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Christ's Descent into Hell
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The Resurrection of Christ
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The Ascension and Second Coming of Christ
From the book
"In the first paragraph of his Christology, Dr. [Francis] Pieper
makes a pointed and critical reference to Adolph von Harnack's famous
dictum from 1900, now almost one hundred years old: "The Gospel, as
Jesus proclaims it, has to do with the Father only and not with the
Son." Pieper responds that "the Gospel has to do not only with the
Father, but also with the Son." This volume is committed to the truth of
Dr. Pieper's observation and will demonstrate that the Gospel, the
teaching about Jesus, did not originate with our own tradition or that
of the Lutheran Confessions. It did not even begin with the apostle
Paul, but with Jesus Himself. The Gospel is not only about Jesus but
comes from Him. (Preface, p. xv)
"Lutherans understand that the Incarnation so closely united the two
natures in one person that it becomes impossible to understand the human
nature as separate or autonomous from the divine. The human nature may
and must be worshiped." (p. 59)
What reviewers have said about Christology
"More recent challenges to traditional Christology have come from
theologians such as Bultmann, Tillich, Pannenberg, Moltmann, and Carl
Braaten, among others. These challenges must be answered directly, and
Scaer provides precise, clear, Confessional and Scriptural answers so
needed for our day and age. . . . Scaer's allegiance to the principle of
sola scriptura is demonstrated clearly in his method. The reader is
given more than proof-texts. Here dogmatics finds its home in the
careful study of Scripture, as Scaer lets the Biblical text speak on its
own terms and answer its own questions."
--Burnell Eckardt, Confessional Lutheran Review.
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