01736nam a2200313 a 450000500170000000800200001702000180003704100080005508200080006308200120007110000230008310000110010624500440011724500300016126000110019126000350020226000090023730000110024630000290025730000100028652008510029665000310114765000290117885600820120791100320128995700140132199900170133595200700135220260119071405.02024-05-30 10:23:53 a9780802878113 aeng a230 bO89-D73 aOttati, Douglas F. eAuthor aA Theology for the Twenty-first Century cDouglas F. Ottati, author aU.S.A. bWm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. c2020 a770tr. bpaperback, illustrations c24 cm aChristianity in the United States is in crisis. Liberalism is declining, evangelicalism is splintering, increasing numbers of Christians are slipping away from churches, and more and more young people are for various reasons finding Christianity as they conceive it (a metaphysical thought system, or society of science-deniers, or an ideology for oppressors) not just implausible but repellent. At the same time, Christians across denominational and ideological divides are rediscovering a moral core, especially in the Jesus of the Gospels, that reactivates and unites them, and this kind of faith appeals to many who consider themselves averse to all traditional organized religion. But any revitalized Christian faith is going to need to understand its rootedness in, and interpretation of, Christianity’s foundational texts and traditions. aRedemption -- Christianity aChristianity -- Theology4 uhttps://data.thuviencodoc.org/books/14649/813pzqnuj-l-sl1500.jpgyCover Image aHuỳnh Thị Ngọc Bích a231010TKH c14500d14500 00104070aTVCDbTVCDd2026-01-20g0.00l0pTVCD-14500v0.00yBK