I am not Baptist or Lutheran (I am Anglican), but I appreciate this effort. I have noticed signs of renewal of the doctrine of God across denominations and see this as a sign of hope. There is a great collection of essays called “On Classical Trinitarianism” edited by Matthew Barrett (one of my favorite theologians, also a Baptist). The essays come from scholars in numerous denominations. Parkison has an essay in the volume, which I look forward to reading.
I thoroughly enjoyed this conversation regarding the beatification vision! It’s encouraging to see a recovery of classical theism across denominational lines.
Fascinating and edifying. The last 10 minutes seemed to beg for a further exploration of the connection to the communion of saints, and for this Roman Catholic, the intercession of the saints.
This conversation was helpful for me. I've been wondering about or perhaps stuck in the seeming tension between (or at least differing emphases of) convenant theology and participatory theology as well as between eschatological understandings of the 'new heavens and new earth' versus the beautific vision. It's helpful to hear the two traditions laid out in this way as fully compatible and not truly being in conflict. In fact, it sounds like they are not truly distinct traditions per se.
@@couriersix7326 because it makes God look evil,a being who created human beings and chooses to love some while hating others unconditionally puts some to hell and some to heaven just because he wanted to. That is hardcore evil bra and heresy .but shoutout to u guys who believe those things about God and still worships him.
@@HenokDaniel-n1h I'm not a Calvinist, but that seems like a strawman of their position. From my understanding, Calvinists do not believe God created anyone to be in Hell. Humans by their own free will chose to sin and became in bondage to sin. So God would be just sending everyone to Hell, but actively chooses to save some.
QUESTION.. Pastor Cooper.. Would you consider starting an archive on the Scripture, Hymns, that ho along with the liturgical gottesdienst (?) 52 part series .. 10 minute overview thing
I am not Baptist or Lutheran (I am Anglican), but I appreciate this effort. I have noticed signs of renewal of the doctrine of God across denominations and see this as a sign of hope. There is a great collection of essays called “On Classical Trinitarianism” edited by Matthew Barrett (one of my favorite theologians, also a Baptist). The essays come from scholars in numerous denominations. Parkison has an essay in the volume, which I look forward to reading.
This is heavenly! ❤
Can't wait for the beautific vision
I thoroughly enjoyed this conversation regarding the beatification vision! It’s encouraging to see a recovery of classical theism across denominational lines.
Thank you for hosting this, Dr. Cooper! Fantastic stuff. I may just have to dive into the book.
Great video as always, Dr. Cooper! Your videos dialoguing with folks of other Christian traditions is some of your best work.
Fascinating and edifying. The last 10 minutes seemed to beg for a further exploration of the connection to the communion of saints, and for this Roman Catholic, the intercession of the saints.
This conversation was helpful for me. I've been wondering about or perhaps stuck in the seeming tension between (or at least differing emphases of) convenant theology and participatory theology as well as between eschatological understandings of the 'new heavens and new earth' versus the beautific vision. It's helpful to hear the two traditions laid out in this way as fully compatible and not truly being in conflict. In fact, it sounds like they are not truly distinct traditions per se.
3:15 *instantly stops watching the video*
JK jk I kept watching :)
Real
Hope u will someday turn to Lutheranism or any Protestant denomination that is not Calvinistic
@@HenokDaniel-n1hWhy do you hate Calvinism so much?
@@couriersix7326 because it makes God look evil,a being who created human beings and chooses to love some while hating others unconditionally puts some to hell and some to heaven just because he wanted to. That is hardcore evil bra and heresy .but shoutout to u guys who believe those things about God and still worships him.
@@HenokDaniel-n1h I'm not a Calvinist, but that seems like a strawman of their position. From my understanding, Calvinists do not believe God created anyone to be in Hell. Humans by their own free will chose to sin and became in bondage to sin. So God would be just sending everyone to Hell, but actively chooses to save some.
Any chance for a video focusing specifically on assurance in light of addiction?
QUESTION.. Pastor Cooper.. Would you consider starting an archive on the Scripture, Hymns, that ho along with the liturgical gottesdienst (?) 52 part series .. 10 minute overview thing
Did Owen's "The Glroy of Christ" help in your work?
Fine job, perhaps now read KJV bible revelation chapter 13, and happy sabbath day