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Atonement and Incarnation
An Essay in Universalism and Particularity

In this book Vernon White sets out to address the crisis of credibility that increasingly has affected traditional claims made for the Atonement.

Vernon White (Author)

9780521407328, Cambridge University Press

Paperback, published 29 March 1991

148 pages
21.6 x 13.8 x 0.9 cm, 0.28 kg

In this book Vernon White sets out to address the crisis of credibility that increasingly has affected traditional claims made for the Atonement, and attempts to explain how the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ can have a universal saving significance. The present work stands as something of a sequel to the author's earlier book The Fall of a Sparrow, which attempted to show how God might be conceived as being universally and specially active in the world. In this study, White concentrates on the saving nature of that activity, and the coherence which he feels emerges if this is grounded in the particularity of the Christ-event. In defending the constitutive nature of Christ's role in the salvation of the world, without relying on Anselmian or penal substitutionary models of atonement, White proposes an atonement model which could rehabilitate such a belief without offending moral and conceptual sensibilities. A supporting chapter is provided outlining the kind of christology required to sustain this model, while the final chapters of the book discuss the ethical implications of the position adopted.

Introduction
1. The claim
2. On having lived too long and seen too much
3. The work of Christ (On trying to conceive how 'things are not as they were')
4. Two recent contributions
5. Creating an atonement model
6. The person of Christ (On trying to conceive how the Word became Flesh)
7. A moral demand: conditions for real reconciliation
8. Anthropocentricity, imperialism and evangelism: an ethical postscript
Notes
Bibliography.

Subject Areas: Christian theology [HRCM], Christianity [HRC]

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