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Hopper's historical-theological study not only illuminates the past but also sheds light on the tumultuous present, revealing how a recaptured understanding of God's transcendence can confront the thoughtless tolerance and inward-facing spiritual consumerism of our own time and radically transform both theology and culture today. --Book Jacket.
And yet the actual implementation of these technologies is often sluggish and much delayed.
Family history and descendants of John Hopper, Sr. (ca. 1750-1852) of Virginia. He died in Owen Co., Indiana. He may have been a son of Thomas Hopper who appears in land entry book of Wilkes Co., N.C. in 1778-1781. John Hopper married (1) 1785 in Wilkes Co., N.C., Anna Wilson (b. ca. 1760/70). She died in Orange Co., Ind. or Madison Co., Ky. He married (2) 1842 in Martin Co., Ind., Catherine Piles born ca. 1779 in North Carolina.
The "conversations" in this collection open by challenging ideas that have become standard and subject them to critical re-examination. The central thread of all these essays is a reflection on the processes of reading and theologizing. Among the contributors to this volume are David E. Aune, Jouette Bassler, Daniel Boyarin, Neil Elliott, Victor Paul Furnish, Lloyd Gaston, Steven J. Kraftchick, Robert C. Morgan, J. Andrew Overman, Mark Reasoner, Peter Richardson, and Robin Scroggs. Juanita Garciagodoy and David H. Hopper offer appreciations of Calvin Roetzel as a teacher and colleague.