THE SPIRIT IN CREATION: A UNIFIED THEOLOGY OF GRACE AND CREATION CARE |
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Authors: | Steven M. Studebaker |
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Affiliation: | 1. Assistant Professor of Systematic and Historical Theology at McMaster Divinity College, McMaster University, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, ON, Canada L8S 4K1;2. e‐mail studeba@mcmaster.ca. |
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Abstract: | This essay identifies one of the deeper theological sources of the tendency toward environmental neglect in evangelical and Pentecostal theology and proposes a theological vision that facilitates a vision of creation care as a dimension of Christian formation. The first section identifies, describes, and evaluates the traditional distinction between common and special grace or the natural and the supernatural orders as a theological foundation for environmental neglect in Pentecostal theology. The second and third sections propose that a pneumatological vision of grace based on a fundamental trinitarianism provides Pentecostals and other Christians with a way to overcome these stark dualisms and to attain a more unified and comprehensive vision of God's grace that is more conducive to creation care. The fourth section presents a case for seeing creation care as a pneumatological and proleptic participation in the eschaton and, as such, as a dimension of Christian formation and sanctification. |
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Keywords: | common grace creation care general revelation the Holy Spirit Pentecostalism pneumatology special grace special revelation the Trinity |
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