Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

James Ussher, Covenant Theology, and Theological Contexts

View through CrossRef
This chapter outlines the arguments of the book and sets them within the context of the expanding scholarly interest in both James Ussher and Reformed covenant theology. This chapter surveys the secondary literature on Ussher from the seventeenth to the twenty-first century, then describes the major arguments about the history of covenant theology and situates Ussher in the context of the development and failure of the Reformation in Ireland by describing the historical circumstances and surveying the major literature about the Irish Reformation. The last major section addresses some of the complexities in authorship, dating, and origin for some of the primary sources from Ussher’s corpus.
Title: James Ussher, Covenant Theology, and Theological Contexts
Description:
This chapter outlines the arguments of the book and sets them within the context of the expanding scholarly interest in both James Ussher and Reformed covenant theology.
This chapter surveys the secondary literature on Ussher from the seventeenth to the twenty-first century, then describes the major arguments about the history of covenant theology and situates Ussher in the context of the development and failure of the Reformation in Ireland by describing the historical circumstances and surveying the major literature about the Irish Reformation.
The last major section addresses some of the complexities in authorship, dating, and origin for some of the primary sources from Ussher’s corpus.

Related Results

The Relationship of the Old Covenant to the Everlasting Covenant
The Relationship of the Old Covenant to the Everlasting Covenant
Problem The old covenant is often understood to be contrary to the new covenant. A distinction is made by such claims as the following: the old covenant represents the Old Testame...
Conceptualising the notion of corporate brand covenant
Conceptualising the notion of corporate brand covenant
PurposeThis paper aims to theorise the concept of corporate brand covenant.Design/methodology/approachChristian theology is drawn on to define and identify the source of the notion...
A Comparative study of the divine covenant between the views of John Calvin and Jacob Arminius
A Comparative study of the divine covenant between the views of John Calvin and Jacob Arminius
This dissertation is a comparative study that compares the views of John Calvin (1509-1594) and Jacob Arminius (1560-1609) about the divine covenant. Both theologians acknowledged ...
Catholicity and the Covenant of Works
Catholicity and the Covenant of Works
This book analyzes James Ussher’s doctrine of the covenant of works and argues that he composed his view by interacting with the broad Christian tradition, used it to integrate his...
Analytic Theology as Confessional Theology with a Linguistic Edge
Analytic Theology as Confessional Theology with a Linguistic Edge
Abstract Clarity about analytic theology’s theological authorities and their relative order will secure analytic theology’s place at the systematic theological tabl...
Theological education and character formation: Perceptions of theological leaders and students
Theological education and character formation: Perceptions of theological leaders and students
Character formation is a mandatory requirement for all theological leaders and students. The purpose of this empirical and field research is to understand the perceptions of theolo...
Developing and Debating the Covenant of Works
Developing and Debating the Covenant of Works
Whereas Chapter 2 dealt primarily with the relationship between Ussher’s doctrine of the covenant of works and the broader Christian tradition, this chapter examines how he develop...
Ussher and Irish History: Britannicarum Ecclesiarum Antiquitates
Ussher and Irish History: Britannicarum Ecclesiarum Antiquitates
Abstract Excluded from the day-to-day running of the Church of Ireland, Ussher in the late 1630s devoted himself to historical research. The result was his 1196-page...

Back to Top