Summary in English
What if Christian doctrine were less about rigid formulas and more about learning the Spirit’s language of love?
In Doctrine Made Flesh, Steve McCormick offers a fresh vision of doctrine rooted in the Church’s encounter with Christ and the Spirit, the “two hands of God” who hold creation in love and guide it toward New Creation. Inspired by the book’s icon of Christ embracing the cosmos and the Spirit breathing life into all things, McCormick shows that doctrine is not abstract speculation but the Church’s Spirit-given grammar of faith, hope, and love.
Here doctrine becomes prayerful, embodied, and communal: a means of grace that helps the Church remember its story, embody Christ’s presence, and imagine God’s promised future. Far from static propositions, doctrines emerge as living words that form communities of witness, hospitality, and joy in a fractured world.
Accessible yet theologically rich, Doctrine Made Flesh invites students, pastors, and thoughtful readers to see doctrine not as a burden to defend but as a gift to receive and share, the language of love through which the Church learns to breathe with the Spirit in the face of God’s future.
To learn more about what you can expect in this book, listen to the audio below.
Theological Essentials
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is changing everything, including theological scholarship and education. This series, Theological Essentials, is designed to bring the creative potential of AI to the field of theological education.
The creator of each volume has been trained by the DTL staff in the use of AI and the creator has used AI to create, edit, revise and recreate the text that you see. The goals of this series are to produce introductory theological textbooks that are credible, affordable and accessible.