April's Spotlight on BC Scholarship!
This month's spotlight on BC Scholarship shines on Dr. Jeff B. Pool's book, God's Wounds: Hermeneutic of the Christian Symbol of Divine Suffering, Volume II.
According to one reviewer, the Pool offers his readers "a coherent and challenging construal of the biblical view of the universe and its destiny."-Peter Macek, Charles University in Prague.
Want to read more? Check out Dr. Pool's book!

Photo by Wipf and Stock Publishers.
Check it out here:
God's Wounds by Jeff B. Pool
Call Number: 231 P821g 2009 v. 2 - BC Scholarship Collection (3rd Floor)
This book constitutes the second volume of a three-volume study of Christian testimonies to divine suffering: God's Wounds: Hermeneutic of the Christian Symbol of Divine Suffering, vol. 2, Evil and Divine Suffering. The larger study focuses its inquiry into the testimonies to divine suffering themselves, seeking to allow the voices that attest to divine suffering to speak freely, then to discover and elucidate the internal logic or rationality of this family of testimonies, rather than defending these attestations against the dominant claims of classical Christian theism that have historically sought to eliminate such language altogether from Christian discourse about the nature and life of God. This second volume of studies proceeds on the basis of the presuppositions of this symbol, those implicit attestations that provide the conditions of possibility for divine suffering-that which constitutes divine vulnerability with respect to creation-as identified and examined in the first volume of this project: an understanding of God through the primary metaphor of love (God is love); and an understanding of the human as created in the image of God, with a life (though finite) analogous to the divine life-the imago Dei as love. The second volume then investigates the first two divine wounds or modes of divine suffering to which the larger family of testimonies to divine suffering normally attest: (1) divine grief, suffering because of betrayal by the beloved human or human sin; and (2) divine self-sacrifice, suffering for the beloved human in its bondage to sin or misery, to establish the possibility of redemption and reconciliation.
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