David Ford
—Regius Professor of Divinity, University of Cambridge
"Professor Thiselton wrestles with some of the deepest issues in contemporary culture. He engages with key thinkers in philosophy, hermeneutics and theology, and faces the big questions of language and rhetoric, power and manipulation, self and society, God and religion. He succeeds in portraying a 'self' that is decisively defined neither by the dilemmas of modernity nor by various kinds of postmodernity. There is an effective critique of Cupitt and the 'Sea of Faith' movement and also a constructive rethinking of faith, hope, love in relation to Jesus Christ and the Trinitarian God."
Professor J�rgen Moltmann
—University of T�bingen
"An enormously rich and constructive wrk. Anthony Thiselton leads theology convincingly into the 'postmodern' age."
Professor Nicholas Wolterstorff
—Yale University
". . . a probing and lucid account of the postmodern understanding of the self, and a most perceptive critique . . . in the light of biblical understanding of God and the self . . . Thiselton's discussion of this topic has no peers."
Professor Richard J. Mouw
—Fuller Theological Seminary
"This is a much needed book that significantly advances the theological and philosophical discussion of postmodernity . . . No one has done a better job of showing how the biblical vision of reality speaks to the deepest yearnings of the postmodern self."