Dare We Hope: "that All Men be Saved"? ; With, A Short Discourse on HellIncludes criticism and interpretation of the views of the New Testament, Origen, Augustine, Thomas Aquinas, and Maurice Blondel on Hell, salvation, and damnation. |
Contents
The New Testament | 2 |
Origen and Augustine | |
Thomas Aquinas | |
The Personal Character | |
Testimonies | |
Blondels Dilemma | |
The Eternity of Hell | |
The SelfConsumption of Evil? | |
On the Situation | |
Christian Faith | |
The Directives of Scripture | |
Hell for Others | |
Joy over Damnation | |
The Obligation to Hope for | |
Definition and Context | |
Possible Responses | |
Other editions - View all
Dare We Hope: "that All Men be Saved"? ; With, A Short Discourse on Hell Hans Urs von Balthasar No preview available - 1988 |
Common terms and phrases
absolute Adrienne von Speyr already angels apokatastasis Augustine Back to text become believe Blondel C. S. Lewis certainty Chapter Christ Christian Christologie Church cited compassion conception condemned created Cross cyclical damnation damned darkness death devil divine love doctrine earth Einsiedeln Eschatology eternal everlasting everything evil evildoers exists faith Father fear final freedom God’s Gospel grace Gregory of Nyssa heaven hell Hermes Holy hope human Ibid Ignatius images implies Irenaeus Jesus Johannesverlag Judge judgment justice Karl Barth Karl Rahner lake of fire living Lord Lubac man’s mankind Maximus Maximus the Confessor means mercy Moses never Old Testament one’s oneself Origen passages Paul person possibility pray prayer precisely predestination Proslogion punishment question reality Redeemer redemption rejected remain resurrection Revelation Saint salvation saved says Scripture sinners sins soul speak Spirit statement suffer theology things torment truth twofold whoever whole wish words