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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Christianity > The Bible > New Testament > General
Winner of the 2013 Book Award of Excellence, The Foundation for
Pentecostal Scholarship What is the meaning of the Holy Spirit's
activity in Luke-Acts, and what are its implications for today?
Roger Stronstad offers a cogent and thought-provoking study of Luke
as a charismatic theologian whose understanding of the Spirit was
shaped wholly by his understanding of Jesus and the nature of the
early church. Stronstad locates Luke's pneumatology in the
historical background of Judaism and views Luke as an independent
theologian who makes a unique contribution to the pneumatology of
the New Testament. This work challenges traditional Protestants to
reexamine the impact of Pentecost and explores the Spirit's role in
equipping God's people for the unfinished task of mission. The
second edition has been revised and updated throughout and includes
a new foreword by Mark Allan Powell.
Whether the Second Epistle of Paul to the Corinthians is a single
document or a compilation of two or more, and the question of
Paul's relations with the Corinthian church between the despatch of
the First and the composition of the Second letter (or letters),
have been matters of debate since the eighteenth century.Margaret
Thrall's commentary engages with these and all the other issues
associated with 2 Corinthians. There follows a detailed
verse-by-verse exegesis of chapters 1-7, which attempts to
understand the viewpoint of the original readers of the text as
well as Paul's own.This volume covers many of Paul's writings which
have evoked considerable scholarly interest in recent years. This
is an exemplary addition to the ICC series.>
This volume brings together an international group of scholars on
Mark and Paul, respectively, who reopen the question whether Paul
was a direct influence on Mark. On the basis of the latest methods
in New Testament scholarship, the battle over Yes and No to this
question of literary and theological influence is waged within
these pages. In the end, no agreement is reached, but the basic
issues stand out with much greater clarity than before. How may one
relate two rather different literary genres, the apostolic letter
and the narrative gospel? How may the theologies of two such
different types of writing be compared? Are there sufficient
indications that Paul lies directly behind Mark for us to conclude
that through Paul himself and Mark the New Testament as a whole
reflects specifically Pauline ideas? What would the literary and
theological consequences of either assuming or denying a direct
influence be for our reconstruction of 1st century Christianity?
And what would the consequences be for either understanding Mark or
Paul as literary authors and theologians? How far should we give
Paul an exalted a position in the literary creativity of the first
Christians? Addressing these questions are scholars who have
already written seminally on the issue or have marked positions on
it, like Joel Marcus, Margaret Mitchell, Gerd Theissen and Oda
Wischmeyer, together with a group of up-coming and senior Danish
scholars from Aarhus and Copenhagen Universities who have
collaborated on the issue for some years. The present volume leads
the discussion further that has been taken up in: "Paul and Mark"
(ed. by O. Wischmeyer, D. Sim, and I. Elmer), BZNW 191, 2013.
![The Gospel of John (Paperback): Francis Martin, William M., IV Wright, Peter Williamson, Mary Healy](//media.loot.co.za/images/x80/718437093504179215.jpg) |
The Gospel of John
(Paperback)
Francis Martin, William M., IV Wright, Peter Williamson, Mary Healy
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In this addition to the Catholic Commentary on Sacred Scripture,
two well-respected New Testament scholars interpret the Gospel of
John in its historical and literary setting as well as in light of
the Church's doctrinal, liturgical, and spiritual tradition. They
unpack the wisdom of the Fourth Gospel for the intellectual and
spiritual transformation of its readers and connect the Gospel with
a range of witnesses throughout the whole history of Catholicism.
This volume, like each in the series, is supplemented by features
designed to help readers understand the Bible more deeply and use
it more effectively in teaching, preaching, evangelization, and
other forms of ministry.
Due to overwhelming popular demand John Wesley prepared these notes
towards the end of his life. He intended them for the devout
Christian, not the scholar. The three volume set consists of:
Genesis--Chronicles II (978-1-84902-634-5), Ezra-Malachi
(978-1-84902-633-8), and The New Testament (978-1-84902-635-2).
Barsoum's wrote many historical essays which he published in now
hard-to-find journals, mainly al-Hikmah and al-Majalla
al-Batriyarkiyya al-Suryaniyya (Jerusalem). This collection of
articles, published in the original Arabic with an English
translation by Matti Moosa, forms the core of Barsoum's historical
writings.
Jesus Becoming Jesus, Volume 3 follows upon the previous two
volumes of this series entitled Jesus Becoming Jesus. Volume 1 was
a theological interpretation of the Gospels of Matthew, Mark and
Luke, and volume 2 was a theological interpretation of the Prologue
and Book of Signs of John's Gospel (chapters 1-12). Unlike many
conventional biblical commentaries, Weinandy concentrates on the
theological content contained within John's Gospel. This is
accomplished through a close reading of John's Gospel,
theologically interpreting each chapter of the Gospel sequentially.
In so doing he also takes into account the Johannine corpus as a
whole. He also relates John's Gospel to relevant material found
within the Synoptic Gospels, the Pauline Corpus and other New
Testament writings. In this present volume, Weinandy's original
theological interpretation focuses first on the Evangelist's
narrative of the Last Supper, which includes Jesus' washing of his
disciples' feet, followed upon his lengthy farewell address and his
ensuing High Priestly Prayer (chapter 13-17). Although Jesus speaks
of his leaving his disciples, yet their hearts should not be
troubled, for he is going to prepare a place for them in his
Father's house, and he will also send them another Counselor, the
Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit will not only convict the world sin,
but he will also empower the disciples to profess their faith in
Jesus as the Father's Son, even in the midst of persecution. All
that Jesus tells his disciple in his final discourse, he then prays
that his Father will accomplish through his forthcoming death and
resurrection-above all that his disciples will share in the same
oneness of love that he and his Father possess. Weinandy
masterfully treats John's Passion and Resurrection Narratives. He
not only theologically interprets the uniqueness of the
Evangelist's narratives, but also how his narratives insect with
the Synoptic accounts. Moreover, Weinandy's theological reading of
Jesus' crucifixion and resurrection weaves together John's
soteriology, ecclesiology, and sacramentality-all of which are
founded upon the Incarnation, that Jesus is the Father's
Spirit-filled incarnate Son. As the title suggests, Jesus, being
named Jesus, in his death and resurrection, definitively enacts his
name and so becoming who he is-YHWH-Saves.
Winner of the 2013 Manfred Lautenschlaeger Award for Theological
Promise
Michael Peppard examines the social and political meaning of divine
sonship in the Roman Empire. He begins by analyzing the conceptual
framework within which the term ''son of God'' has traditionally
been considered in biblical scholarship. Then, through engagement
with recent scholarship in Roman history - including studies of
family relationships, imperial ideology, and emperor worship - he
offers new ways of interpreting the Christian theological metaphors
of ''begotten''and ''adoptive'' sonship.
Peppard focuses on social practices and political ideology,
revealing that scholarship on divine sonship has been especially
hampered by mistaken assumptions about adopted sons. He invites
fresh readings of several early Christian texts, from the first
Gospel to writings of the fourth century. By re-interpreting
several ancient phenomena - particularly divine status, adoption,
and baptism - he offers an imaginative refiguring of the Son of God
in the Roman world.
Manuscripts of the New Testament frequently contain, in addition to
the text, supplementary information such as excerpts from the
Fathers, chapter lists, quotation lists, introductions to sections,
for example, the Pauline letters, and to individual books. The a
žEuthalian apparatusa oe is the name given to one such collection
of helps to the reader. Unfortunately, the relationship of the
various parts, the identity of the author, the time of the writing,
and the provenance remain uncertain. This work collects,
summarizes, and analyzes the sometimes disparate published
scholarship on the apparatus through 1970. The bibliography updates
the original bibliography through 2007 and includes newly
identified, earlier bibliographic references.
After a survey of recent approaches to the study of Paul's use of
Scripture, the four main chapters explore the use of Isa. 54:1 in
Gal. 4:27, the catena of scriptural texts in 2 Cor. 6:16-18, Hos.
1:10 and 2:23 in Rom. 9:25-26 and Isa. 57:19 in Eph. 2:17. In each
case, the ancienwriter seeks to place the letter in its historical
context and rhetorical situation, identify the significance of any
conflations or modifications that have taken place in the citation
process, analyse the citation's function within its immediate
context, compare its use by Paul with the various ways in which the
text is interpreted and appropriated by other Second Temple
writers, and evaluate the main proposals offered as explanations
for the riddle posed by the citation. That done, he offers his own
account of the hermeneutic at work, based on an analysis of the
explicit and implicit hermeneutical pointers through which the
letter guides its readers in their appropriation of Scripture. This
book compares the hermeneutical approaches of the four letters and
draws conclusionsconcerning the interplay of continuity and
discontinuity between Scripture and gospel in Paul's letters and
the relationship between grace and Gentile inclusion in his
theology.
Scholars have long noted the prevalence of praise of God in
Luke-Acts. This monograph offers the first comprehensive analysis
of this important feature of Luke's narrative. It focuses on
twenty-six scenes in which praise occurs, studied in light of
ancient Jewish and Greco-Roman discourse about praise of deity and
in comparison with how praise appears in the narratives of Tobit
and Joseph and Aseneth. The book argues that praise of God
functions as a literary motif in all three narratives, serving to
mark important moments in each plot, particularly in relation to
the themes of healing, conversion, and revelation. In Luke-Acts
specifically, the plot presents the long-expected visitation of
God, which arrives in the person of Jesus, bringing glory to the
people of Israel and revelation to the Gentiles. The motif of
praise of God aligns closely with the plot's structure,
communicating to the reader that varied (and often surprising)
events in the story - such as healings in Luke and conversions in
Acts - together comprise the plan of God. The praise motif thus
demonstrates the author's efforts to combine disparate source
material into carefully constructed historiography.
The monograph is devoted to a crucial point of Christian theology:
its development from the short formulae of the 'gospel'
(euangelion) - as the first reflected expressions of Christian
faith - to the theology of literary Gospels as texts that evoked
the idea of Christian canon as a counterpart of the "Law and
Prophets". In the formulae of the oral gospel the apocalyptic
expectations are adapted into a "doubled" or "split" eschatology:
The Messiah has appeared, but the messianic reign is still the
object of expectation. The experience with Jesus' post Easter
impact has been named as "resurrection" of which God was the
subject. Since the apocalyptic "resurrection" applied for many or
all people, the resurrection of Jesus became a guarantee of hope.
The last chapters analyze the role of the oral gospel in shaping
the earliest literary Gospel (Mark). This book analyses Gospels as
texts that (re-)introduced Jesus traditions into the Christian
liturgy and literature. Concluding paragraphs are devoted to the
titles of the individual Gospels and to the origins of the idea of
Christian canon.
This monograph on John 9 makes extensive use of premodern Christian
exegesis as a resource for New Testament studies. The study
reframes the existing critique of the two-level reading of John 9
as allegory in terms of premodern exegetical practices. It offers a
hermeneutical critique of the two-level reading strategy as a kind
of figural exegesis, rather than historical reconstruction, through
an extensive comparison with Augustine's interpretation of John 9.
A review of several premodern Christian readings of John 9 suggests
an alternative way of understanding this account in terms of
Greco-Roman rhetoric. John 9 resembles the rhetorical argumentation
associated with chreia elaboration and the complete argument to
display Jesus' identity as the Light of the World. This analysis
illustrates the inseparability of form and content, rhetoric and
theology, in the Fourth Gospel.
Poverty, Wealth, and Empire presents an antidote to the liberal
Jesuses that are constantly being constructed by theologians and
historians in universities and seminaries in the West. Sandford's
programme is to pay attention to those texts where Jesus appears
hostile to his audiences, or even invokes the idea of divine
judgment and violence against certain groups. Drawing on a variety
of texts in the Synoptic Gospels, Sandford finds violent
denunciations of the rich and those who neglect the needy to be a
consistent theme in Jesus' teaching. R ather than deploying
biblical texts to support an antiimperial or liberationist agenda,
Sandford foregrounds troubling and problematic texts. Among them
are wisdom sayings that justify poverty, texts that denigrate
particular ethnic groups, and the ideology inherent in Jesus'
teachings about 'the Kingdom of God'. On such a basis Sandford is
able to call into question the effectiveness of mainline Christian
scholarly interpretations of Jesus in dealing with the most
profound ethical problems of our time: poverty, domination and
violence. Always alert to the assumptions and prejudices of much
Western New Testament scholarship, Sandford draws attention to its
intellectual contradictions, and, furthermore, to the way in which
this scholarship has sometimes served to undergird and justify
systems of oppression-in particular by its demonstrable dodging of
the issue of material poverty and its causes. Building on recent
debates in postcolonial biblical criticism, Sandford offers a
decidedly 'illiberal' reading of Jesus' sayings on divine judgment,
focusing on the paradoxical idea of a 'nonviolent' Jesus who
nevertheless makes pronouncements of divine violence upon the rich.
In this addition to the well-received Paideia series, New Testament
scholars Duane Watson and Terrance Callan examine cultural context
and theological meaning in First and Second Peter. Paideia
commentaries explore how New Testament texts form Christian readers
by
- attending to the ancient narrative and rhetorical strategies the
text employs
- showing how the text shapes theological convictions and moral
habits
- commenting on the final, canonical form of each New Testament
book
- focusing on the cultural, literary, and theological settings of
the text
- making judicious use of maps, photos, and sidebars in a
reader-friendly format
This commentary, like each in the projected eighteen-volume series,
proceeds by sense units rather than word-by-word or verse-by-verse.
Students, pastors, and other readers will appreciate the
historical, literary, and theological insight Watson and Callan
offer in interpreting First and Second Peter.
This commentary is especially useful for pastors and teachers who
know that the members of their audiences use a variety of different
English versions. It is also a helpful tool for serious students of
the Bible, including laypeople and seminary students. In addition
to this passage-by-passage commentary, the reader is introduced to
the art of textual criticism, its importance for studying the New
Testament, and the challenges translators of English versions
face.
Presented in a clear, easy to read manner. All major English
translations are surveyed & tabulated.
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