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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Christianity > The Bible > New Testament > General
Pastoring is tough. The challenges are many, expectations are high,
and tasks are wide ranging.
Pastoral Practices is a guide to help pastors draw on the
insights of Wesleyan theology and incorporate them into their
ministries. Whatever the task may be--preaching, discipling,
evangelizing, or administrating--this book will shed light on the
way Wesleyan theology refines, informs, and enhances the theories
and methods of each pastoral practice.
Not only will pastors and their associates find this book a
worthwhile asset, but lay leaders, small-group facilitators, and
others doing ministry in the church will also benefit from its
invaluable insight and well-reasoned advice.
New Testament I and II represents Vol. I/15 and I/16 in the Works
of Saint Augustine: A Translation for the 21st Century. The present
volume contains the translations of four works, all of which are
exegetical treatises of one sort or another: The Lord's Sermon on
the Mount, Agreement among the Evangelists, Questions on the
Gospels and Seventeen Questions on Matthew. Each of the four works
are accompanied by its own introduction, general index, and
scripture index. The Lord's Sermon on the Mount (translated by
Michael Campbell, OSA) is an exegesis of chapters five through
seven of Matthew's Gospel, but Augustine's explanation of the
Sermon is more a charter of Christian morality and spirituality
than mere exegesis of the text and brings a unity to the lengthy
discourse that goes far beyond an account of what the text says.
Augustine wrote Agreement among the Evangelists in 400,
contemporaneously with the composition of his Confessions (397 -
401).The treatise, translated by Kim Paffenroth, is an attempt to
defend the veracity of the four evangelists in the face of seeming
incompatibilities in their record of the gospel events, especially
against some pagan philosophers who raised objections to the gospel
narratives based on alleged inconsistencies. Questions on the
Gospels and Seventeen Questions on Matthew are translated by Roland
Teske, SJ. Questions on the Gospels is a record of questions that
arose when Augustine was reading the Gospels of Matthew and Luke
with a disciple. The answers to the questions are not intended to
be commentaries on the Gospels in their entirety but merely
represent the answers to the questions that arose for the student
at the time. Seventeen Questions on Matthew is similarly in the
question-and-answer genre and is most likely by Augustine, but it
includes some paragraphs at the end that are certainly not his. For
all those who are interested in the greatest classics of Christian
antiquity, Augustine's works are indispensable. This long-awaited
translation makes Augustine's monumental work approachable.ABOUT
THE AUTHOR Augustine of Hippo (354-430) is one of the greatest
thinkers and writers of the Western world. After he converted to
Christianity he became bishop of Hippo in North Africa, where he
was influential in civil and church affairs. His writings have had
a lasting impact on Western philosophy and culture.
Margaret Froelich examines the Gospel of Mark using political and
empire-critical methodologies, following postcolonial thinkers in
perceiving a far more ambivalent message than previous pacifistic
interpretations of the text. She argues that Mark does not
represent an entirely new way of thinking about empire or cosmic
structures, but rather exhibits concepts and structures with which
the author and his audience are already familiar in order to
promote the Kingdom of God as a better version of the encroaching
Roman Empire. Froelich consequently understands Mark as a response
to the physical, ideological, and cultural displacement of the
first Roman/Judean War. By looking to Greek, Roman, and Jewish
texts to determine how first-century authors thought of conquest
and expansion, Froelich situates the Gospel directly in a
historical and socio-political context, rather than treating that
context as a mere backdrop; concluding that the Gospel portrays the
Kingdom of God as a conquering empire with Jesus as its victorious
general and client king.
What did Jesus think of himself? How did he face death? What were
his expectations of the future? In this volume, now in paperback,
internationally renowned Jesus scholar Dale Allison Jr. addresses
such perennially fascinating questions about Jesus. The acclaimed
hardcover edition received the Biblical Archaeology Society's "Best
Book Relating to the New Testament" award in 2011.
Representing the fruit of several decades of research, this major
work questions standard approaches to Jesus studies and rethinks
our knowledge of the historical Jesus in light of recent progress
in the scientific study of memory. Allison's groundbreaking
alternative strategy calls for applying what we know about the
function of human memory to our reading of the Gospels in order to
"construct Jesus" more soundly.
The theme of heaven and earth is a much-overlooked aspect of the
Gospel of Matthew. In this work, rising scholar Jonathan Pennington
articulates a fresh perspective on this key interpretive issue,
challenging both the scholarly and popular understandings of the
meaning of Matthew's phrase, "kingdom of heaven."
Pennington argues that rather than being a reverent way of
referring to God as is typically assumed, "heaven" in Matthew is
part of a highly developed discourse of heaven and earth language.
Matthew's way of using heaven language serves one overriding
theological purpose: to highlight the tension that currently exists
between heaven and earth or God and humanity, while looking forward
to its eschatological resolution. This affordable North American
paperback edition was previously published in hardcover by Brill.
Katherine Joy Kihlstrom Timpte addresses a gap in scholarship by
answering the question: "how is a child supposed to be the model
recipient of the kingdom of God?" While most scholarship on Mark
10:13-16 agrees that children are metaphorically employed because
of their qualities of dependence, Timpte argues that it is more
specifically an image of the disciple's radical transformation,
which both mirrors and reverses the traditional rites of passage by
which a child became an adult. Timpte suggests that Jesus, by
insisting that one must enter the Kingdom of God as a child,
invokes two interlacing images. First, to enter the Kingdom of God,
one must be fundamentally transformed and changed. Second, this
transformation reverses the rite by which a child would have become
an adult, removing the adult's superior status. Beginning with a
summary of the scholarship surrounding children in the Bible,
Timpte explores the perception of children in the ancient world,
their rites of passage and entrance into adulthood, and contrasting
this with the processing of entering the kingdom of God, while also
highlighting childish characters in Mark. Timpte concludes that to
enter into the kingdom as a child means that one must strip off
those things one gained by leaving childhood behind: wealth,
respect, family, much like Jesus, who throughout Mark's Gospel
moves from powerful to powerless, respected to despised, and
accepted by all to rejected even (seemingly) by God. Jesus models
transformation to childhood in an emphasis on what the Kingdom of
God is like.
This is an introductory guide to the four New Testament Gospels as
overlapping accounts of the life, death and resurrection of Jesus,
each with their own distinctive emphases and concerns. Part One
deals first with the fact that there are four Gospels in the canon
and looks at how the fourfold Gospel emerged. The literary
relationships between the Gospels are dealt with next, followed by
the composition of the Gospels. Part Two looks at each Gospel, its
structure, contents, style and narrative technique, its
presentation of Jesus and its particular interests and themes. Part
Three, the main section of the book, takes six key events in the
life of Jesus, most of which are found in all four Gospels, and
examines the parallel versions. The book ends with reflections on
the fourfold Gospel and the singular Jesus, including a discussion
of key issues relating to the 'historical Jesus'. Edward Adams is
Senior Lecturer in New Testament Studies at King's College London.
In The Interpersonal Metafunction in 1 Corinthians 1-4, James D.
Dvorak offers a linguistic-critical discourse analysis of 1 Cor 1-4
utilizing Appraisal Theory, a model rooted in the modern
sociolinguistic paradigm known as Systemic-Functional Linguistics.
This work is concerned primarily with the interpersonal meanings
encoded in the text and how they pertain to the act of
resocialization. Dvorak pays particular attention to the
linguistics of appraisal in Paul's language to determine the values
with which Paul expects believers in Christ to align. This book
will be of great value to biblical scholars and students with
interests in biblical Greek, functional linguistics, appraisal
theory, hermeneutics, exegesis, and 1 Corinthians.
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