TL;DR: The models for the HYPOSTATIC UNION EXCURSUS 1: CONSEQUENCES of the UNION II, TRINITARIAN ISSUES III: COUNTING PERSONS and NATURES IV. THEORIES OF SUBSISTENCE as mentioned in this paper
Abstract: I. MODELS FOR THE HYPOSTATIC UNION EXCURSUS 1: CONSEQUENCES OF THE UNION II, TRINITARIAN ISSUES III. THE COMMUNICATION OF PROPERTIES EXCURSUS 2: COUNTING PERSONS AND NATURES IV. THEORIES OF SUBSISTENCE
TL;DR: Gorman as discussed by the authors presents the first full-length treatment of Aquinas's metaphysics of the hypostatic union of Christ, which is one of the founding doctrines of Christian theology.
Abstract: The hypostatic union of Christ, namely his being simultaneously human and divine, is one of the founding doctrines of Christian theology. In this book Michael Gorman presents the first full-length treatment of Aquinas's metaphysics of the hypostatic union. After setting out the historical and theological background, he examines Aquinas's metaphysical presuppositions, explains the basic elements of his account of the hypostatic union, and then enters into detailed discussions of four areas where it is more difficult to get a clear understanding of Aquinas's views, arguing that in some cases we must be content with speculative reconstructions that are true to the spirit of Aquinas's thought. His study pays close attention to the Latin texts and their chronology, and engages with a wide range of secondary literature. It will be of great interest to theologians as well as to scholars of metaphysics and medieval thought.
TL;DR: The perichoresis in the incarnation of Christ must be distinguished from the communication of attributes and from the way in which it is applied to the persons of the Godhead as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: The doctrine of perichoresis has been important for a number of contemporary theologians. However, it has been given much less philosophical attention. This essay is a philosophical-theological examination of the doctrine of perichoresis. Whereas most contemporary theologians who write about perichoresis restrict its application to the Holy Trinity, this paper seeks to address the question of its relevance for the hypostatic union in Christology. In order to do this, perichoresis in the incarnation must be distinguished from the communication of attributes and from the way in which it is applied to the persons of the Godhead. I conclude that perichoresis has an important though often neglected use in Christology, as well as a right use in trinitarian theology.
TL;DR: In this paper, Torrance's theory of the mediation of Christ in the scientific theology of T.F. Torrance has been examined in the context of the present thesis, where the vast and scattered array of Torrance’s thought is reduced to a minimal number of basic concepts, or "elemental forms", that arise from the nexuses of interrelations that constitute the identity of the incarnate Son.
Abstract: The doctrine of the mediation of Jesus Christ in the scientific theology of T.F. Torrance rests on the fundamental scientific axiom, derived from the natural sciences, that knowledge is developed in accordance with the nature (kata physin) of the object as it is revealed in the course of scientific inquiry. As a theological realist, Torrance finds real and accurate knowledge of God in Jesus Christ. To know God through the incarnate Son, who is “of one nature with the Father” (homoousios to Patri), is to know God in strict accordance with God’s nature and hence in a theologically scientific way. Scientific theology will operate on a christological basis, for the incarnation of Jesus Christ is the “controlling centre” for the Christian doctrine of God. Torrance’s holistic theology investigates its object of inquiry within the nexus of “ontorelations,” or “being-constituting” interrelations, that disclose its identity. Because the fundamental aspects of reality are relational rather than atomistic, a scientific theological approach to the doctrine of the mediation of Jesus Christ requires that he be investigated within the nexuses of interrelations that disclose his identity as incarnate Saviour of the world. An examination of Torrance’s doctrine of mediation reveals three specific nexuses of “onto-relations” that disclose the identity of Jesus Christ. These are his interrelations with 1) historical Israel, 2) God, and 3) humanity. In the present thesis, the vast and scattered array of Torrance’s thought on the mediation of Jesus Christ is reduced to a minimal number of basic concepts, or “elemental forms,” that arise from the nexuses of interrelations that constitute the identity of the incarnate Son. These basic, constitutive concepts of Torrance’s doctrine of the mediation of Christ are the Nicene homoousion and the Chalcedonian doctrine of the hypostatic union, as well as the doctrines of incarnational redemption and the “vicarious humanity” of Jesus Christ. These elemental forms provide a basic, organising framework to examine and explain the mediation of revelation and reconciliation of Jesus Christ in the scientific theology of T.F. Torrance.