nostr:npub1v9kwmst5jkd94wl55dngt7x6urqc84nukgdvc57s7umlz9x4rx5q6csdmx well, from what I read of it, it certainly didn't seem radical! It read a bit like an attempt to revitalise the ideas of the Oxford Movement. I liked the title, as I do think that, properly understood, orthodox Christology and Trinitarian theology ought to have radical consequences (the Son of God executed by an empire for preaching radical grace!)
nostr:npub1ex328w5w0hjweznw8t6f9epk5w5xy4ak6kzyc7y93lfjtelxuymsk9c58j That's my rough understanding too, though know little about it, other than the fact that it is neither radical nor orthodox.
Discussion
nostr:npub1v9kwmst5jkd94wl55dngt7x6urqc84nukgdvc57s7umlz9x4rx5q6csdmx imho, the scandal of incarnation is not philosophical, but ethical. It's not so much that incarnation happened, but that it was Jesus the carpenter of Nazareth