A penetrating study of how Calvin's anthropological understanding of Christian identity informed and underpinned his doctrine of the church.
An exploration of how spiritual and secular thought collide and combine in today's world, charting a new way forward that combines the best of both worldviews.
A timely and fascinating examination of the decline in religious faith and rise of secular thought in western intellectual society.
One of the classic texts of moral theology, setting out crucial moral problems and arguments drawn from religion and the religious community.
Concentrating on the development of the ascetic tradition in Christianity, this book provides a justification for the centrality of worship in Christian life.
The first of three volumes exploring the development of the concepts of sin, grace and free will in Christian theology, beginning with the Church Fathers.
The second of three volumes exploring the development of the concepts of sin, grace and free will in Christian theology, from the Middle Ages to the Reformation.
A closely reasoned analysis of the works of Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite, demonstrating that they do not support an apophatic understanding of the divine.
A challenging view of how church divisions have influenced competing approaches to biblical interpretation, using 19th-century Anglican debate as a model.