Books by "Irving J. Dunn"

3 books found

Effects of Varying Certain Cooking Conditions in Producing Soda Pulp from Aspen

Effects of Varying Certain Cooking Conditions in Producing Soda Pulp from Aspen

by David Fairchild, George Alfred Runner, Henry Earl Surface, Irving E. Melhus, John Hamilton, John Thomas Bowen, Norman De Witt Betts, Robert Macfarlane Chapin, Wightman Wells Garner, William Allen Orton, Charles Walter Bacon, Charles Léon Foubert

1914

Effects of Varying Certain Cooking Conditions in Producing Soda Pulp from Aspen

Effects of Varying Certain Cooking Conditions in Producing Soda Pulp from Aspen

by Altus Lacy Quaintance, Burton Noble Gates, Clyde William Warburton, David Fairchild, Edward Lee Shaw, Eugene Sewell Bruce, Everett Franklin Phillips, George Alfred Runner, Gershom Franklin White, Harry Merwin Russell, Harry Thompson, Henry Earl Surface, Irving E. Melhus, John A. Newlin, John Hamilton, John Martin Miller, John T. Bowen, Norman De Witt Betts, Robert Macfarlane Chapin, Wightman Wells Garner, William Allen Orton, William Henry Fry, William Henry Long, William Mark Davidson, Charles Walter Bacon, Earl Devere Strait, George S. Demuth, Lewis Lincoln Heller, Lyman Crane Burnett, Charles Léon Foubert, Harry Houser Love

1914

We Believe

We Believe

by Alexander Irving

2021 · Inter-Varsity Press

The Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed of ad 381 was a key statement in the context of the theological controversies and confessional atmosphere of the fourth-century church. Alexander Irving explores Christian belief about God, creation and redemption, as it is expressed in the Creed. He thereby contributes to the continuing task of the church's self-examination of its talk about God. Irving shows the importance of tradition and the intrinsic relationship between thought in the church today and thought in the church across time. He sets the Creed in its historical and theological contexts, and connects its theology to some areas of contemporary theological inquiry. The Creed sets out the basic parameters of Christian belief. While the specifics of what is believed within those parameters are not determined, there is an internal logic to the Creed's presentation of the Christian faith. The contrast between God's internal and external relations is the theological motif that gives particular shape to the Creed, which expresses an expansive vision of the generosity of God, with his relation to creation grounded in his being as love.