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Exploring Mormon Thought

Front Cover with Gold Lettering


Close-up on Artwork

The illustration of God as the circumscriber and measurer popularly called "The Ancient of Days," is a hand colored engraving by the poet, painter and professional engraver William Blake (1757-1827) and appeared as the frontispiece to his Europe: A Prophecy published in 1794.
Hardback: $29.95
ISBN 1-58958-003-6
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Limited Leather: $159.95
ISBN 1-58958-002-8
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Excerpts from
the book:

Preface.pdf
Forward.pdf
TOC.pdf

Chapter1.pdf
Chapter2.pdf
Chapter3.pdf
Chapter4.pdf
Chapter5.pdf
Chapter6.pdf
Chapter7.pdf
Chapter8.pdf
Chapter9.pdf
Chapter10.pdf
Chapter11.pdf
Chapter12.pdf
Chapter13.pdf

Library of Congress data.pdf


In this, the first volume of a planned series of works on Mormon thought, Blake T. Ostler explores Christian and Mormon notions about God. Written for both Mormons and non-Mormons interested in the relationship between Mormonism and classical theism, his path-breaking Exploring Mormon Thought: The Attributes of God is a critique of classical theism regarding some of the central concepts that have formed the Christian understanding of God. He deals with questions of traditional philosophical theology including free will and foreknowledge, the nature of God and Christology. The approach to these questions is from the analytic philosophical tradition and includes detailed arguments relating to the coherence of Christian belief, scripture and practice. However he recognizes that religious faith is far more a product of intimacy with the divine than of ultimacy of reason, more a product of relationships than of logical necessities.

He provides an overview of the most influential Christian notions of deity, exploring themes and resources within this discourse that might be helpful to Latter-day Saint explorations. Also highlighted are various perspectives within Mormonism itself including a detailed analysis of Joseph Smith's Lectures on Faith and discussion of the thought of Orson and Parley Pratt, B. H. Roberts and John Widstoe. Earlier Mormon thought is demonstrated to have included a concept of God as a being in process. He suggests areas in which Mormon approaches to questions about free agency and God's omnipotence might suggest resolutions to some of the difficult issues that have troubled theologians and philosophers for centuries. For the first time ever Ostler formulates a systematic Mormon Christology.




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