
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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The Mediator of Kenotic Christology to Scotland: A. B. Bruce The Mediator of Kenotic Christology to Scotland: A. B. Bruce
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The Later Scottish Kenoticists The Later Scottish Kenoticists
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David W. Forrest David W. Forrest
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P. T. Forsyth P. T. Forsyth
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H. R. Mackintosh H. R. Mackintosh
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Bibliography Bibliography
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2 Scottish Kenotic Theology
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Published:October 2019
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Abstract
This chapter treats Scottish kenoticism as an empirically driven appropriation of mid-nineteenth-century German Lutheran kenoticists. In his seminal work, The Humiliation of Christ (1876), A. B. Bruce is shown to be the mediator of the new German theology. Later Scottish kenoticism is represented here by David Forrest, P. T. Forsyth, and H. R. Mackintosh, all of whom sought to maintain a commitment to the incarnation through the employment of kenotic categories. The development and criticism of kenoticism are considered as it migrated from Germany to the English-speaking world. Questions are raised in conclusion as to the ongoing usefulness of the theory of a divine ‘self-reduction’ or depotentiation.
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