Matthew Levering

Engaging the Doctrine of Revelation

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How do human beings today receive divine revelation? Where and in what ways is it mediated so that all generations can hear the fullness of the gospel? In this volume, distinguished theologian Matthew Levering shows that divine revelation has been truthfully mediated through the church, the gospel, and Scripture so that we can receive it in its fullness today. Levering engages past and present approaches to revelation across a variety of traditions, offering a comprehensive, historical study of all the key figures and perspectives. His thorough analysis results in an alternative approach to prevailing views of the doctrine and points to its significance for the entire church.
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688 printed pages
Publication year
2014
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Quotes

  • David Bloomerhas quoted8 years ago
    Furthermore, since God’s self-revelation does not attempt to resolve all conceptual problems before they arise in the Church, revelation anticipates the necessity of development and even of contentious development. For Newman, this implies that the Church must possess, under the Holy Spirit’s guidance, an infallible charism to determine what are true developments: “A revelation is not given, if there be no authority to decide what it is that is given.”29
  • David Bloomerhas quoted8 years ago
    Vincent of Lérins’s rule that “Christianity is what has been held always, everywhere, and by all,” cannot suffice to delineate the content of Christian faith today.22 By admitting this, Newman is not arguing that the doctrine of the Trinity represents a rupture with the pre-Nicene Church; rather, in light of Anglican efforts to invoke the Vincentian canon as the measure of sound doctrine, he is arguing that if we are wary of accepting any doctrine that historians cannot show to have been accepted by the earliest Church, then we will also have to be wary of accepting the doctrine of the Trinity.23 The attempt to do without the Church, and to hold only that which the Bible explicitly teaches, does not work either, not least because the Bible does not present itself as a source to be interpreted without the Church.24 The meaning of Scripture’s words cannot be known without interpretation, which involves more than the mere repetition of Scripture’s words.25 A living ecclesial authority is necessary.
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