• This Complicated and Risky Task
  • Rodrigo D. Tano, PhD.

    • Softbound (₱640.00)
          
    • Publisher: Alliance Graduate School
    • ISBN: 978-971-691-524-2
    • No. of Pages: 328
    • Size: 6 x 9
    • Edition: 2006




    Description:

    This is a modest project conceived to honor the legacy of one of our denomination’s – if not, Filipino evangelicalism’s – foremost theologians, Dr. Rodrigo D. Tano.

    Still, it astonishes me now to think that this project really began as a series of spirited discussions we have had at the Alliance Book Club, a small, if not rather irregular, fellowship I organized with the help of this volume’s able editor, who was not even a lawyer yet when we first cooked up the idea.

    So it can now be said that this is, in fact, a project that is three years in the making; moreover, that we were somehow able to put this collection together – yes, despite all the limitations that more often than not bedevil a struggling seminary such as ours – once again proves the truism that there is no stopping an idea whose time has come, especially if it is one founded on work that is purely by gratis et amore, which is what this project really is.






    • This Complicated and Risky Task
    • by:  Rodrigo D. Tano, PhD.
      • ISBN
        978-971-691-524-2
      •     
      • Page length
        328 pages
      •     
      • Dimension
        6 x 9 inches
      •     
      • Edition
        2006
      •     

    •  
    •   

    Description:


    This is a modest project conceived to honor the legacy of one of our denomination’s – if not, Filipino evangelicalism’s – foremost theologians, Dr. Rodrigo D. Tano.

    Still, it astonishes me now to think that this project really began as a series of spirited discussions we have had at the Alliance Book Club, a small, if not rather irregular, fellowship I organized with the help of this volume’s able editor, who was not even a lawyer yet when we first cooked up the idea.

    So it can now be said that this is, in fact, a project that is three years in the making; moreover, that we were somehow able to put this collection together – yes, despite all the limitations that more often than not bedevil a struggling seminary such as ours – once again proves the truism that there is no stopping an idea whose time has come, especially if it is one founded on work that is purely by gratis et amore, which is what this project really is.