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Mapping Modern Theology: A Thematic and Historical Introduction is unavailable, but you can change that!

This text offers a fresh approach to modern theology by approaching the field thematically, covering classic topics in Christian theology over the last two hundred years. The editors, leading authorities on the history of nineteenth- and twentieth-century theology, have assembled a respected team of international scholars to offer substantive treatment of important doctrines and key debates in...

from God, principally noticed by an unrelieved feeling of guilt, would finally be removed. Trusting in God was the solution (i.e., salvation) to being alienated by one’s own guilty conscience. It was not God who was alienated from sinners, but rather sinners who were alienated from God in virtue of their guilty conscience. Finally, we should acknowledge that Ritschl was quite critical of the individualistic orientation of soteriology in Protestant Orthodoxy. He decried the individualistic notions
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