An exhaustive guide to every significant Christian theologian from the first century through to the death of John Duns Scotus in 1308.
A critique of the Aramaic Hypothesis that has dominated historical Jesus studies, suggesting that the language Jesus and his followers spoke was Greek.
An introduction and commentary to the Didache, or the Teaching of the Twelve Apostles, one of the earliest writings of the Christian Church.
Essays by theologians from the Majority World that share a diversity of insights into Christian faith, developed from their own cultural perspectives.
Essays exploring, from a multiplicity of viewpoints, the philosophical and theological dimensions of the essence-energy distinction in Orthodox Christianity.
An introduction to the thought and writings of the Franciscan theologian St Bonaventure, through his insightful commentary on the Gospel of St Luke.
A creative contribution to the doctrine of revelation, seeking an understanding of God's self-disclosure in the Church's participation in His Trinitarian life.
An examination of how the early English Reformers understood the doctrine of justification by faith, including a survey of the history of English Reformation theology throughout this important formative period.
A compilation of 58 of the essential contemporary documents of the English Reformation from 1526 to 1700. An invaluable source for both students and scholars.
Series: Library of Ecclesiastical History