EBOOK

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How should one approach the task of theology?
The question of methodology is increasingly one of interest among theologians, who recognize that the very manner in which we approach theology informs both the questions we ask and the conclusions we reach.
This volume in IVP's Spectrum Multiview series brings together five evangelical theologians with distinctly different approaches to the theological task. After presenting the approaches-which include appeals to Scripture, context, missions, interdisciplinary studies, and dogmatics-each contributor responds to the other views.
Emerging from this theological conversation is an awareness of our methodological commitments and the benefits that each approach can bring to the theological task.
Contributors:
• Sung Wook Chung
• John R. Franke
• Telford C. Work
• Victor Ifeanyi Ezigbo
• Paul Louis Metzger
The question of methodology is increasingly one of interest among theologians, who recognize that the very manner in which we approach theology informs both the questions we ask and the conclusions we reach.
This volume in IVP's Spectrum Multiview series brings together five evangelical theologians with distinctly different approaches to the theological task. After presenting the approaches-which include appeals to Scripture, context, missions, interdisciplinary studies, and dogmatics-each contributor responds to the other views.
Emerging from this theological conversation is an awareness of our methodological commitments and the benefits that each approach can bring to the theological task.
Contributors:
• Sung Wook Chung
• John R. Franke
• Telford C. Work
• Victor Ifeanyi Ezigbo
• Paul Louis Metzger
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Reviews
"I'm a great fan of the comparative views books. This format was pioneered by InterVarsity Press in 1977 with Robert Clouse's The Meaning of the Millennium, and since then over eighty such volumes have appeared published by InterVarsity Press and others. What makes the format so useful is that a number of authors set out to give their answers to the same questions, which makes comparison easier, and then in turn respond to the answers given by the others. This makes it much simpler to understand where the real differences lie and to work out one's own position. The current volume is no exception. Five different evangelical authors layout their approach to theological method and then respond to each other. This helps to clarify the extent to which these five different methods are strictly alternatives and the extent to which they can be combined. Anyone wishing to understand evangelical theological method or to work their own method is strongly recommended to read this book."
Tony Lane, professor of historical theology, London School of Theology