
Contents
14 Christian Theology in a Comparative Context
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Published:March 2000
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Abstract
Comparative theology is a co-operative enterprise. It is a way of doing theology in which scholars holding different world-views share together in the investigation of concepts of ultimate reality, the final human goal, and the way to achieve it. Naturally, each scholar will have a particular perspective. One might expect it to develop and deepen in the many conversations of comparative theology, but it will most probably remain the same in its fundamental elements, especially if the scholar is a member of a religious community.
The series of four books which this volume completes are intended to form a contribution to comparative theology. But the conversations upon which they are founded have taken place outside the text, and a proper comparative theology would need to include written responses and original contributions from members of many traditions. So one might best see these four books as a systematic Christian theology, undertaken in a comparative context.
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