Title
Every Knee Should Bow Biblical Rationales for Universal Salvation in Early Christian Thought
Files
Description
In Every Knee Should Bow, Steven Harmon explores the manner in which Clement of Alexandria (ca. 160-215 C.E.), Origen (ca. 185-ca. 251 C.E.), and Gregory of Nyssa (331/340-ca. 395 C.E.) appealed to Scripture in developing rationales for their concepts of apokatastasis, the hope that all rational creatures will ultimately be reconciled to God. Harmon argues that these patristic universalists maintained their hope for "a wideness in God's mercy" primarily because they believed this hope was the most coherent reading of the biblical story. Although Hellenistic thought might also have suggested an eschatology in which the end corresponds to the beginning, the eschatologies of these ancient Christian theologians were shaped mainly by the Hebrew story of creation, fall, redemption, and consummation, read through the lenses of the church's experience of God's saving work in the person of Jesus Christ. These early attempts to take seriously the biblical story's affirmations of the divine intention to save all people on the one hand, and of judgment and hell on the other, have a certain timeless relevance. In a context not unlike that of the late antique Christian world, the postmodern church again wrestles with these tensions in the biblical story in the midst of religious pluralism.
ISBN
9780761827191
Publication Date
2003
Publisher
Rowman & Littlefield
City
Lanham
Keywords
creation, early Christian, salvation
Disciplines
Christian Denominations and Sects | Christianity | Practical Theology | Religious Thought, Theology and Philosophy of Religion
Recommended Citation
Harmon, Steven R., "Every Knee Should Bow Biblical Rationales for Universal Salvation in Early Christian Thought" (2003). Gardner-Webb Faculty and Staff Book Gallery. 15.
https://digitalcommons.gardner-webb.edu/fbg/15