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  2. John Hick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Hick

    John Harwood Hick (20 January 1922 – 9 February 2012) was an English-born philosopher of religion and theologian who taught in the United States for the larger part of his career. In philosophical theology , he made contributions in the areas of theodicy , eschatology , and Christology , and in the philosophy of religion he contributed to the ...

  3. The Myth of God Incarnate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Myth_of_God_Incarnate

    First edition. The Myth of God Incarnate is a book edited by John Hick and published by SCM Press in 1977. James Dunn, in a 1980 literature review of academic work on the incarnation, noted the "...well-publicized symposium entitled The Myth of God Incarnate, including contributions on the NT from M. Goulder and F. Young, which provoked several responses."

  4. Eschatological verification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eschatological_verification

    John Hick has expressed the premise as an allegory of a quest to a Celestial City. In this parable, a theist and an atheist are both walking down the same road. The theist believes there is a destination, the atheist believes there is not.

  5. Theosis (Eastern Christian theology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theosis_(Eastern_Christian...

    Theosis (Ancient Greek: θέωσις), or deification (deification may also refer to apotheosis, lit. "making divine"), is a transformative process whose aim is likeness to or union with God, as taught by the Eastern Catholic Churches and the Eastern Orthodox Church; the same concept is also found in the Latin Church of the Catholic Church, where it is termed "divinization".

  6. Divinization (Christian) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Divinization_(Christian)

    The "doer" in deification is the Holy Spirit, with whom the human being joins his will to receive this transforming grace by praxis and prayer, and as Gregory Palamas teaches, the Christian mystics are deified as they become filled with the Light of Tabor of the Holy Spirit in the degree that they make themselves open to it by asceticism ...

  7. Truth claim - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Truth_claim

    A truth claim is an assertion held to be true in a religious belief system; however, it does not follow that the assertion can be proven true. For example, a truth claim in Judaism is that only one God exists, while other religions are polytheistic.

  8. Problem of religious language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Problem_of_religious_language

    To Hick, calling Jesus the Son of God was a metaphor used by Jesus' followers to describe their commitment to what Jesus represented. [34] Hick believed that demythologising the incarnation would make sense of the variety of world religions and give them equal validity as ways to encounter God. [35]

  9. Philosophy of religion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophy_of_religion

    Hick defines his view as "the great world faiths embody different perceptions and conceptions of, and correspondingly different responses to, the Real or the Ultimate." [ 92 ] For Hick, all religions are true because they all allow us to encounter the divine reality, even if they have different deities and conceptions of it.