Foreword
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Accountability in Theology
I. Theology
II. Accountability and Inquiry
III. Practical Implications
2. Authority and Experience in Religious Ethics
I. Decline of Authority
II. Ontology and Cosmology in Religion
II. Cosmological Ethics, Ontological Religion
3. Philosophical Theology: The Case of the Holy Spirit
I. The Holy Spirit as the Creator's Presence
II. God the Creator and Trinity
III. The Holy Spirit as a Systematic Speculative Problem
IV. God and the Holy Spirit in Public Inquiry
4. Creation and the Trinity
I. The Metaphysics of Creation
II. Trinitarian Persons
III. Economy and Immanence
IV. Begetting and Creating
5. Can God Create People and Address Them Too?
I. That God Can
II. How God Might Address
III. The Address and Life in the Spirit
6. The Empirical Cases of World Religions
I.The Speculative Hypothesis
II. The Empirical Task of Theology
III. Practical Conclusions
7. The Notion of Creation in Chinese Thought
I. Creation Ex Nihilo
II. Taoism
III. Confucianism
8. Process and the Neo-Confucian Cosmos
I. Manifesting the Clear Character
II. Loving the People
III. Abiding in the Highest Good
IV. Investigation of Things
V. Harmony and Creation
9. Buddhism and Process Philosophy
I. Process
II. Relationships and Causation
III. Unity and Interpenetration
IV. Creation
10. The Daimon and the Tao of Faith
I. Faith as Preparation
II. Faith as Certainty
III. Forsaking Wrong Attachments
11. The Daimon and the Tao of Practice
I. Two Levels of Truth
II. Two Truths as a Philosophic Claim
III. Concepts in the Higher Truth
IV. Scholarship in Practice
Postscript
I. The Daimon in the Tao
II. Four Loci of the Tao
III. Silence and the Sufficient Conditions
Notes
Index