Book contents
- Human Anguish and God’s Power
- Current Issues in Theology
- Human Anguish and God’s Power
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- The Echternach Procession: A Preface
- 1 Introduction: Consoling Anguish and Making It Worse
- Part I Glory
- Part II Kingdom
- 3 God’s Intrinsic “Sovereignty”
- 4 Creation, Providence, and Theologically Problematic Pastoral Consolation
- 5 The Triune God’s “Sovereignty” in Two Registers
- 6 Excursus: Must God Have Only One Eternal Purpose?
- Part III Power
- Part IV Stammering Praise
- Bibliography
- Index
5 - The Triune God’s “Sovereignty” in Two Registers
from Part II - Kingdom
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 January 2021
- Human Anguish and God’s Power
- Current Issues in Theology
- Human Anguish and God’s Power
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- The Echternach Procession: A Preface
- 1 Introduction: Consoling Anguish and Making It Worse
- Part I Glory
- Part II Kingdom
- 3 God’s Intrinsic “Sovereignty”
- 4 Creation, Providence, and Theologically Problematic Pastoral Consolation
- 5 The Triune God’s “Sovereignty” in Two Registers
- 6 Excursus: Must God Have Only One Eternal Purpose?
- Part III Power
- Part IV Stammering Praise
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The Triune God is “sovereign” in a different sense in creative blessing than God is in connection either in providential care or in eschatological blessing. In each God’s sovereignty is ordered in a different concrete way to a different sort of good for creatures. This is brought out by exploring the implications of the different pattern or taxis in which the three “Persons” of the Trinity are said to be involved in these two different ways of relating to all else. One implication is that God is best characterized in providential care as relating as pantokrator, tht which “holds all things together.”
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- Information
- Human Anguish and God's Power , pp. 134 - 166Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020