Who Can Be Saved?: Reassessing Salvation in Christ and World Religions
511Who Can Be Saved?: Reassessing Salvation in Christ and World Religions
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Overview
- Is there a wideness in God's mercy?
- Does God reveal himself in a way that invites all people to respond positively in saving faith?
- Does one have to be an Arminian to believe so?
- Or is there a way for Calvinists to see how God might reveal and save apart from the explicit "gospel" and yet exclusively through Jesus Christ?
- And if so, what does this say about the role of religions within the sovereign providence of God?
These are big questions requiring thoughtful care. In this intriguing study, Terrance L. Tiessen reassesses the questions of salvation and the role of religions and offers a proposal that is biblically rooted, theologically articulated and missiologically sensitive. This is a book that will set new terms for the discussion of these important issues.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9780830827473 |
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Publisher: | InterVarsity Press |
Publication date: | 02/27/2004 |
Pages: | 511 |
Product dimensions: | (w) x (h) x 1.40(d) |
About the Author
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments 1. Where Are We Going? 2. What Are the Options? 3. Is Accessibilism a New Idea?Part 1: How Does God Save People? 4. Who Needs to Be Saved? 5. Whom Is God Trying to Save? 6. To Whom Does God Reveal Himself? 7. By What Standard Are People Judged? 8. Can People Be Saved If They Only Have General Revelation? 9. What About the Saved Who Did Not Believe in Jesus? 10. Can Infants Be Saved? 11. Who Is Able to Believe? 12. Why Should We Send Missionaries?Part 2: How Do the Religions Fit into God's Purposes in the World? 13. How Do Religions Come into Being? 14. How Did the Covenant People Relate to Other Religions? 15. Is There Revelation in Other Religions? 16. Is There Salvation in Other Religions? 17. How Do We Discern God's Grace in Other Religions? 18. Should We Participate in Interreligious Dialogue? 19. Should We Cooperate in Interreligious Activities? 20. Concluding Reflections Glossary Appendix 1: A "Particular Atonement" Reading of the Apparently Universal References Concerning Salvation Appendix 2: The Distinction Between My Proposal of Universal Sufficient Grace and Amyraldian "Hypothetical Universalism" Appendix 3: Scriptural Support for the Concept of Universally Sufficient Enabling Grace Author Index Subject Index Scripture IndexWhat People are Saying About This
"Terrance Tiessen reshapes the paradigm for Christian thinking about religions, taking us beyond the inadequate language of exclusivism, inclusivism and pluralism, and offering fresh analyses and stimulating insights. He offers what many of us have longed fora fully worked-out, carefully biblical and Reformed case for the conviction that the sovereignty of God's saving grace in all human history, while it is exclusively grounded in the person and work of Jesus Christ, is not exclusively limited to the church's evangelistic obedience (or lack of), presented in a way that does not thereby diminish the evangelistic mandate or motive. Tiessen disputes an 'ecclesiocentrism' that reduces the elect to a subcategory of the evangelized and argues rather that those whom God saves through evangelism will be a proportion of the wider elect. Tiessen argues with constant clarity and enviable command of historical, systematic and biblical theology, and is transparent in his own presuppositional stance. He steadily refuses to affirm or infer anything dogmatically beyond what the Bible either affirms or clearly implies, but courageously offers some fascinating original proposals for critical evaluation in areas where the Bible is silent. Few books I have read have been so doctrinally thorough, closely and cautiously argued, and thought-provoking on the twin subjects of the destiny of the unevangelized and the status and role of religions in the purposes of God."
"While not endorsing all of the author's conclusions, I recommend this book as an excellent introduction to the contemporary discussion on the boundaries of Christian faith. "The strength of this theology is that it is both exclusive and inclusive. It is exclusive because it upholds Jesus Christ as the only way to salvation. It is inclusive because it sees God's grace at work in all religions and among all peoples."
"Who Can Be Saved? Reassessing Salvation in Christ and World Religions is a bold and significant contribution to evangelical theological and missiological thinking on a very controversial issue. Its theological depth and its missiological grounding set it apart from many other books."
"Professor Tiessen has producd a major work on a cluster of issues that are as complex as they are controversial. One need not agree with all of his conclusions to benefit from this carefully crafted theological and missiological study."
"The product of many years of reading, thinking and discussion, this is one of the most satisfactory comprehensive treatments of salvation ever attempted by an evangelical in the Reformed tradition. Even thoselike mewho do not share in that tradition will discover in Tiessen an immensely well-informed, trustworthy and fair-minded guide through the labyrinthine maze of questions issuing from Christian understanding of and response to the Bible's teaching on salvation. Unless I am greatly mistaken, this book will serve as the benchmark reference on the subject for evangelical teachers, pastors, missionaries and students for years to come."
"This book does two things impressively well: It skilfully clarifies many issues that too often are blurred in the discussion of world religions, and it argues the author's own views with gracefulness, maturity, and cogency. Professor Tiessen thus takes his proper place in the forefront of evangelical theology of religions with a book that will become a reference point for all further work in the field."
"This is a sensitive, patient, sophisticated evangelical response to evangelical questions concerning the religions. Tiessen takes the biblical witness with utter seriousnessa seriousness lacking in most books on this and related subjects. Those from the Reformed tradition will be especially pleased with the nuanced attention given to problems of salvation and revelation in the religions."