One of the most influential recent typologies was developed by David Tracy in his The Analogical Imagination (1981). Admitting that the boundaries are not fixed, his typology says that systematic theology takes the Church (or a religious community, Christian in Tracy's case) for its public, fundamental theology takes the academy for its public, and practical theology takes society, usually addressed by a social movement, as its public.
- FIRST SUNDAY OF ADVENT Year C November 29, 2015
- HISTORY OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Phillip Schaff)
- Church History (Anglican)
- A History of Unitarianism (Earl Morse Wilbur)
- Anglican Timeline
- BibleGateway
- Catechism Of The Catholic Church
- Eastern Orthodox Church Beliefs and Practices
- Christian Classics Ethereal Library
- Biblical Criticism and Study of the Old Testament
- What Is the Historical-Critical Method?
- Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
- Saint Anselm of Canterbury (1033–1109)
- On the Incarnation of the Word by St. Athanasius
- Natural Theologyl (Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
- Church History Search Page (Christian Classics Ethereal Library)
- Revelation (New Advent: Catholic Encyclopedia)
- David Tracy (Boston Collaborative Encyclopedia of Western Theology)
- Charles Hartshorne
- Schubert Ogden
- The Incommensurability of Scientific Theories
- Thomas Kuhn (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
- Scientific Realism
- Categories (Stanford Dictionary of Philosophy)
- Oxford Biblical StudiesOnline
- Walter Wink: Remembrance and Reflection
- The Death of Death in the Death of Christ (John Owen)
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