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The Journey of Modern Theology: From Reconstruction to Deconstruction is unavailable, but you can change that!

Modernity has been an age of revolutions—political, scientific, industrial and philosophical. Consequently, it has also been an age of revolutions in theology, as Christians attempt to make sense of their faith in light of the cultural upheavals around them, what Walter Lippman once called the "acids of modernity." Modern theology is the result of this struggle to think responsibly about God...

were routinely condemned, he was shunned and isolated through most of his ministry, and pastors who embraced his views were forced to be discreet.”[82] One constant theme throughout all his works was “all theological language necessarily falls short of complete objectivity” so that “there can be no absolutely objective or scientific theology.”[83] He thought that many of the theological controversies tearing Christians apart from one another were based on tendencies to take divine revelation too
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