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  1. Taking stock of the Trinitarian renaissance: What have we learnt?Rian Venter - 2019 - HTS Theological Studies 75 (1):6.
    The re-appreciation of the Trinitarian confession in the twentieth century is widely considered a major theological development. Recently, several critical voices emerged, questioning the direction of these explorations. As response, the article identifies major emphases of this rediscovery, namely, the return to sources, the clarification of the function of the confession and its re-envisioning of the nature of divinity, the more centring of the Christian vision in one material principle, the heuristic potential for practical questions and the need for apophatism. (...)
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  • 'Man is by Nature a Social and Political Animal': Essential and Anti-Essentialist Relational Ontologies Revisited.C. C. Pecknold - 2013 - Heythrop Journal 54 (2):883-899.
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  • ‘Man is by Nature a Social and Political Animal’: Essential and Anti-Essentialist Relational Ontologies Revisited.C. C. Pecknold - 2016 - Heythrop Journal 57 (6):883-899.
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