ETHC 205 Quiz Christian Anthropology
ETHC 205 Quiz Christian Anthropology and Human Flourishing
- According to Allison, only about 30% of both men and women suffer from negative body image.
- Messer writes that our ultimate end is to cease to exist so that our suffering might end.
- Neil Messer’s account of human flourishing is grounded in the Pentecostal Christian tradition.
- According to Allison, the following term means “the way you act as a result of your body image.”
- Neil Messer says that Karl Barth believed that all of the following are God’s good purposes for human creatures EXCEPT which?
- According to Allison, one of the definitions of Embodiment is a field of study that explores how people are present bodily and engage physically in the world.
- Messer believes that in a fallen world, there is still the possiblity for a perfect balance between all human goods.
- Messer believes that the term “health” is an accurate way of communicating all of the aspects of flourishing that God intends for us.
- According to Allsion, one of the defintions of Embodiment is simply having or being in a body.
- Messer writes that sin is categorized as all of the following, EXCEPT:
- According to Allison, the big idea is that maturing as Christ folowers is only about spiritual and moral progress, and doesn’t deal with issues of the body.
- According to Allison, because of neo-Gnosticism, we soemtimes view the body as an instrument, diminishing its importance.
- According to Allison, neo-Gnosticism may manifest itself in the following way:
- According ot Allison, the following term means “how you think about your body.”
- Messer writes that it is objectively bad to be a human creature.
- Messer writes that our ignorance, self-interest, and prejudice might distort our understanding of what human flourishing means.
- According to Messer, as long as someone is in the vocation God wants them in, they won’t suffer.
- Messer writes that our ultimate end is eternal life with God.
- According to Messer, complete human flourishing is an eschatological hope.
- Messer’s first stage in his account of human flourishing is to highlight the Christian tradition that thinks that human beings are God’s creatures.
- According to Messer, which of the following is NOT one of Barth’s “four dimensions” of the “divine summons” to be what God has created us to be?
- Messer believes that even forms of suffering (psychological or otherwise) can be a form of flourishing.
- According to Allison, the biblical mandate in Genesis to engage in procreation and vocation emphasizes that life in this physical reality is a divinely given responsibility.
- According to Messer, attching ultimate importance to a real but penultimate good is a species of what Christians call
- According to Messer, The World Health Organization (WHO) has the same understanding of human creaturely flourishing as Barth taught.