He Came Down from Heaven and the Forgiveness of SinsApocryphile Press, 2005 - 204 pages Charles Williams was one of the finest--not to mention one of the most unusual--theologians of the twentieth century. These two long essays make up, with The Descent of the Dove, Charles Williams' principal theological writing. With these books and with The Figure of Beatrice the reader is as fully equipped as possible for studying the religious thought of this brilliant poet, novelist, essayist and historian. His mysticism is palpable-the unseen world interpenetrates ours at every point, and spiritual exchange occurs all the time, unseen and largely unlooked for. His novels are legend, and as a member of the Inklings, he contributed to the mythopoetic revival in contemporary culture. |
Table des matières
Chapter page I Heaven and the Bible | 9 |
The Myth of the Alteration in Knowledge | 17 |
The Mystery of Pardon and the Paradox of Vanity | 29 |
The Precursor and the Incarnation of the Kingdom | 46 |
The Theology of Romantic Love | 62 |
The Practice of Substituted Love | 82 |
The City | 95 |
THE FORGIVENESS OF SINS | 105 |
Forgiveness in Shakespeare | 111 |
The Sin of Adam | 119 |
The Offering of Blood | 134 |
Forgiveness in Man | 147 |
The Technique of Pardon | 160 |
Forgiveness and Reconciliation | 177 |
The Present Time | 190 |
Introduction | 107 |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
accepted Adam already answer appearance Beatrice become beginning believe Bible blood body called carried cause certainly choice Christ Christian Church City coming communicated concerned condition continually course created creation creatures Dante death definition demand desire divine doubt earth eternal evil exist experience fact faith Fall flesh follow forgiven forgiveness give glory Gospel greater hand happen heart heaven holy human idea involved kind kingdom knowledge known least less light living Lord man's matter means Measure Messias mind moral myth nature never offered once operation original pardon perfect perhaps phrase possible precisely present prophets reason relation remains repentance Saint seems sense single sins soul spirit substitution supposed thing thou thought tion true turned union universe unto virtue whole