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Books > Christianity > The Bible > New Testament
Empire-critical and postcolonial readings of Revelation are now
commonplace, but scholars have not yet put these views into
conversation with Jewish trauma and cultural survival strategies.
In this book, Sarah Emanuel positions Revelation within its ancient
Jewish context. Proposing a new reading of Revelation, she
demonstrates how the text's author, a first century CE Jewish
Christ-follower, used humor as a means of resisting Roman power.
Emanuel uses multiple critical lenses, including humor, trauma, and
postcolonial theory, together with historical-critical methods.
These approaches enable a deeper understanding of the Jewishness of
the early Christ-centered movement, and how Jews in antiquity
related to their cultural and religious identity. Emanuel's volume
offers new insights and fills a gap in contemporary scholarship on
Revelation and biblical scholarship more broadly.
Walter Kaiser questions the notion that the New Testament
represents a deviation from God's supposed intention to save only
the Israelites. He argues that--contrary to popular opinion--the
older Testament does not reinforce an exclusive redemptive plan.
Instead, it emphasizes a common human condition and God's original
and continuing concern for all humanity. Kaiser shows that the
Israelites' mission was always to actively spread to gentiles the
Good News of the promised Messiah. This new edition adds two new
chapters, freshens material throughout, expands the bibliography,
and includes study questions.
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The Gospel
(Paperback)
Edward Arthur Naumann; John The Evangelist
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R150
Discovery Miles 1 500
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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Hace mas de cincuenta anos que el texto que publicara la escritora
Sunshine Ball se usa como un libro de lectura devocional, de
estudio en grupos de creyentes en la iglesia y como texto en los
Institutos Biblicos. Esta es una revision que, al contar con
bosquejos, tablas y graficos, hace facil el estudio apocaliptico.
Si quiere una perspectiva escatologica de actualidad, no deje de
leer y usar esta herramienta que nunca pasara de moda, sino hasta
que el Senor venga. 'Guarda estas cosas en secreto y sella el libro
hasta la hora final, pues muchos andaran de un lado a otro en busca
de cualquier conocimiento.' Daniel 12:4 'Dichoso el que lee y
dichosos los que escuchan las palabras de este mensaje profetico y
hacen caso de lo que aqui esta escrito, porque el tiempo de su
cumplimiento esta cerca.' Apocalipsis 1:3"
Respected New Testament scholar Karen Jobes explores the cultural
and theological background of Hebrews and the general epistles
(James through Jude) in this rich commentary. Writing from an
evangelical perspective, Jobes addresses issues of historical
relevance as well as how these ancient books connect with Christian
faith and practice today. Letters to the Church includes:
-Historical background for each book focusing on authorship, genre,
date, and content -An exploration of the major themes in each book
and detailed commentary on key passages -Boxes with chapter goals,
outlines, challenges, and significant verses -Sidebars addressing
difficult passages or ideas -Maps, photographs, charts, and
definitions -Questions for discussion, reflection, and testing -A
comparison of the teachings about Christ in each of the letters
Pastors, professors, students, and laypeople interested in deeper
biblical study will find this an invaluable resource that offers
well-researched commentary in an accessible, spiritually meaningful
form.
Paul writes his letter to the Philippians referencing two related
forms of persecution. The Christians of Philippi are experiencing
persecution by the Roman authorities who govern the Philippi. Paul
himself is experiencing persecution by the Roman authorities (the
Roman emperor's praetorian guard) in Rome. Roman persecution is
thus the fundamental context for his letter. Paul's most basic
premise in this letter is to hold high the slave, Jesus Christ! In
perhaps the most moving passage he ever wrote (Phil 2:6-11) Paul
delineates that Jesus did not count equality with God something to
be grasped at but rather empties himself taking the form of a slave
and embracing crucifixion, the slave's form of death. Accordingly.
God has raised Jesus to the highest place and has caused all on the
earth, above the earth, and under the earther to bow at the name of
Jesus and to proclaim that Jesus alone is Lord to the glory of God
the Father. Very significantly, Paul affirms that Christian slaves
are ennobled by Jesus initiatives. Because these slaves now join
the other Christian citizens in having "citizenship in heaven,"
Paul's letter constitutes a radical threat to the Roman imperial
authorities in this way as well.
'These Letters ... aim to make John's Gospel accessible to people
today as their own gospel, both as a whole and in the details; to
illuminate it with the spiritual knowledge of the age and to make
it fruitful for life, not only for meditation but also for
practical ordering of destiny.' - Friedrich Rittelmeyer. --- A
revitalized Johannine Christianity stands at the heart of the work
of Christian renewal that was led by Rudolf Steiner in the early
twentieth century. Friedrich Rittelmeyer, a Lutheran minister and
theologian who helped found The Christian Community in 1922, was a
leading figure within this new Johannine movement. Rittelmeyer
described John's Gospel as encapsulating '...an indescribable glory
of revelation of love. This glory has such purity, delicacy and
spiritual power that in it one has the material with which a
marvellous new world may be built.' --- Without doubt his most
powerful work, Rittelmeyer's Letters on John's Gospel first
appeared in a series of publications by the Stuttgart seminary of
The Christian Community between 1930 and 1932. Whilst these Letters
were originally written with students and local congregations in
mind, they provide manifold insights for anyone seeking to glimpse
the majesty of John's Gospel. Margaret Mitchell's translation from
1937 has never before been published in book form. Revised here and
expanded by editors Alan Stott and Neil Franklin, this volume
features additional contributions by Rudolf Frieling and Emil Bock.
"The followers of Jesus are to be different," writes John Stott,
"different from both the nominal church and the secular world,
different from both the religious and the irreligious. The Sermon
on the Mount is the most complete delineation anywhere in the New
Testament of the Christian counter-culture." In the Sermon on the
Mount, the "nearest thing to a manifesto" that Jesus ever uttered,
we find Jesus' own description of what he wanted his followers to
be and do. In this Bible Speaks Today volume, Stott guides readers
through Jesus' well-known but often poorly understood teachings in
Matthew 5 through 7. Leading us to listen carefully to the meaning
of each verse in its context, Stott also confronts the challenges
this text raises for today's Christians and draws out practical
applications. This revised edition features lightly updated
language, current NIV Scripture quotations and a new interior
design. A seven-session study guide at the end of the book will
help you more deeply ponder the message of the Sermon on the Mount
and how it speaks to your life.
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On Repentance
(Paperback)
Saint Ambrose of Milan, Nun Christina, Anna Skoubourdis
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R329
Discovery Miles 3 290
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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