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Books > Christianity > The Bible > New Testament
The Gospel writers state they aim to tell the story of Jesus in a
clear manner, but throughout Paul McCarren's years in ministry, he
has seen that these simple and important messages are too often
missed. In his Simple Guides to the Gospels series, McCarren
provides a new translation of each Gospel book, leading readers
chapter by chapter through the text. Each section includes
scripture and a brief, engaging commentary about how readers can
relate to the material. The Simple Guides introduce readers to life
in early Christianity, describe points of controversy, and show how
each section fits with those that went before. The Simple Guide to
Matthew highlights many of Jesus' compelling sayings, stories such
as the Sermon on the Mount, and key themes of Jesus' ministry, such
as trust. The books in the Simple Guides to the Gospels series are
available individually or together as a complete set.
Holy Scripture and economists have distinct ways of exploring
market networks. The Body of Christ in a Market Economy explains
how desire connects scripture, economics, theological anthropology,
and soteriology. By explaining the mechanics of desire and Jesus'
saving grace, it becomes possible for churches and congregations to
better align their networks for the common good within market
economies. Rivalry is an expense. Follow Jesus or prepare to spend.
In the Pauline literature of the New Testament, the characteristics
of the Spirit and Christian life are described through the use of
metaphor. An interpreter of Paul must understand his metaphors in
order to arrive at a complete understanding of the Pauline
pneumatological perspective. Thus, The Pauline Metaphors of the
Holy Spirit examines how the Pauline Spirit metaphors express the
intangible Spirit's tangible presence in the life of the Christian.
Rhetoricians prior to and contemporary with Paul discussed the
appropriate usage of metaphor. Aristotle's thoughts provided the
foundation from which these rhetoricians framed their arguments. In
this context, The Pauline Metaphors surveys the use of metaphor in
the Greco-Roman world during the NT period and also studies modern
approaches to metaphor. The modern linguistic theories of
substitution, comparison, and verbal opposition are offered as
representative examples, as well as the conceptual theories of
interaction, cognitive-linguistic, and the approach of Zoltan
Koevecses. In examining these metaphors, it is important to
understand their systematic and coherent attributes. These can be
divided into structural, orientational, and ontological
characteristics, which are rooted in the conceptual approach of
metaphor asserted by George Lakoff and Mark Johnson. This book
evaluates these characteristics against each of the Pauline
Spirit-metaphors.
In this addition to the well-received Paideia series, two respected
New Testament scholars offer a practical commentary on James and
Jude that is conversant with contemporary scholarship, draws on
ancient backgrounds, and attends to the theological nature of the
texts.
This commentary, like each in the projected eighteen-volume series,
proceeds by sense units rather than word-by-word or verse-by-verse.
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
Students, pastors, and other readers will appreciate the
historical, literary, and theological insight that John Painter and
David deSilva offer in interpreting James and Jude.
The only Catholic Study Bible based on the Revised Standard Version
2nd Catholic Edition, the Ignatius Catholic Study Bible New
Testament brings together all of the books of the New Testament and
the penetrating study tools developed by renowned Bible teachers
Dr. Scott Hahn and Curtis Mitch.
This volume presents the written Word of God in a highly
readable, accurate translation, excellent for personal and group
study. Extensive study notes, topical essays and word studies
provide fresh and faithful insights informed by time-tested,
authentically Catholic interpretations from the Fathers of the
Church and other scholars. Commentaries include the best insights
of ancient, medieval and modern scholarship, and follow the
Church's guidelines for biblical interpretation. Plus, each New
Testament book is outlined and introduced with an essay covering
questions of authorship, date of composition, intended audience and
general themes. The Ignatius Study Bible also includes handy
reference materials such as a doctrinal index, a concise
concordance, a helpful cross-reference system, and various maps and
charts.
This book investigates the Matthean use of bread and the breaking
of bread in light of cognitive conceptual metaphor, which are not
only intertwined within Matthew's narrative plots but also function
to represent Matthew's communal identity and ideological vision.
The metaphor of bread and its cognitive concept implicitly connect
to Israel's indigenous sense of identity and religious imagination,
while integrating the socio-religious context and the identity of
Matthean community through the metaphoric action: breaking of
bread. While using this metaphor as a narrative strategy, Matthew
not only keeps the Jewish indigenous socio-religious heritage but
also breaks down multiple boundaries of religion, ethnicity,
gender, class, and the false prejudice in order to establish an
alternative identity and ideological vision. From this perspective,
this book presents how the Matthean bread functions to reveal the
identity of Matthew's community in-between formative Judaism and
the Roman Empire. In particular, the book investigates the metaphor
of bread as a source of Matthew's rhetorical claim that represents
its ideological vision for an alternative community beyond the
socio-religious boundaries. The book also reviews Matthean contexts
by postcolonial theories - hybridity and third space - subverting
and deconstructing the hegemony of the dominant groups of formative
Judaism and the imperial ideology of Rome.
This probe into Paul's theology argues that in his eschatological
thinking there is a conceptual overlap between Jesus and God. As in
several pseudepigraphical texts, there is in Paul a certain
identification of the roles of God and the messianic figure.
Especially in Paul's doctrines of the parousia and the final
judgment this overlap features the Old Testament idea of the Day of
the Lord Yahweh becoming transposed into the Day of the Lord
Christ. In examining Paul's teaching on the messiah and the
Kingdom, Kreitzer offers a penetrating analysis of how Paul
balanced theocentricity and christocentricity within his
eschatology, and how the theme of Christ's subordination to God is
interjected into his doctrine.
The parables of Jesus have undergone different transmutations in
the long history of their transmission. The events surrounding his
death and resurrection as well as the new situations his followers
were confronted with after these events led to the parables of
Jesus being given new accentuations according to the needs of the
reflecting community. This is evident in Matthew's treatment of the
parable trilogy of Mt 21:28-22:14. This work shows how Matthew has
used the dominical parables and sayings found in his tradition to
serve the needs of his community, especially in its struggles with
the official Jewish leaders of his time. Through these parables,
which he presented as a three-pronged attack against the Jewish
leaders, Matthew shows his community as the true Israel, called to
produce the fruits of righteousness. In this regard, the Jewish
leaders stand for the members of Matthew's community lacking in the
actions that define belongingness to the chosen people. This group
has no part in the eschatological banquet.
The Use of Exodus in Hebrews illustrates how traditions and
hermeneutics have significantly determined people's valuations of
the relationship between the Old and New Covenants in Hebrews. By
showing how the author of Hebrews uses the canonical revelation
from Exodus to argue rhetorically, ontologically, and
hermeneutically that Jesus Christ is the New Covenant priest in the
heavenly tabernacle, this book offers an epistemological lens from
Exodus to identify the correct view of the relationship between the
Old and New Covenants.
This book compares our contemporary preoccupation with ownership
and consumption with the role of property and possessions in the
biblical world, contending that Christian theology provides a
valuable entry point to discussing the issue of private property-a
neoliberal tool with the capacity to shape the world in which we
live by exercising control over the planet's resources. Babie and
Trainor draw on the teaching on property and possessions of Jesus
of Nazareth. They demonstrate how subsequent members of the Jesus
movement-the writers of early collection of Jesus sayings (called
'Q'), and the gospels of Mark and Luke-reformulated Jesus' teaching
for different contexts that was radical and challenging for their
own day. Their view of wealth and possessions continues today to be
as relevant as ever. By placing the insights of the Galilean Jesus
and the early Jesus movement into conversation with contemporary
views on private property and consumer culture, the authors develop
legal, philosophical and theological insights, what they describe
as 'seven theses', into how our desire for ethical living fares in
the neoliberal marketplace.
The Passion Translation is a modern, easy-to-read Bible translation
that unlocks the passion of God's heart and expresses his fiery
love-merging emotion and life-changing truth. This translation will
evoke an overwhelming response in every reader, unfolding the deep
mysteries of the Scriptures. If you are hungry for God, The Passion
Translation will help you encounter his heart and know him more
intimately. Fall in love with God all over again.
The great German theologian Albert Schweitzer famously drew a line
under 19th century historical Jesus research by showing that at the
bottom of the well lay not the face of Joseph's son, but rather the
features of all the New Testament scholars who had tried to reveal
his elusive essence. In his thoughtful and provocative new book,
Halvor Moxnes takes Schweitzer's observation much further: the
doomed 'quest for the historical Jesus' was determined not only by
the different personalities of the seekers who undertook it, but
also by the social, cultural and political agendas of the countries
from which their presentations emerged. Thus, Friedrich
Schleiermacher's Jesus was a teacher, corresponding with the role
German teachers played in Germany's movement for democratic
socialism. Ernst Renan's Jesus was by contrast an attempt to
represent the 'positive Orient' as a precursor to the civilized
self of his own French society. Scottish theologian G A Smith
demonstrated in his manly portrayal of Jesus a distinctively
British liberalism and Victorian moralism. Moxnes argues that one
cannot understand any 'life of Jesus' apart from nationalism and
national identity: and that what is needed in modern biblical
studies is an awareness of all the presuppositions that underlie
presentations of Jesus, whether in terms of power, gender, sex and
class. Only then, he says, can we start to look at Jesus in a way
that does him justice.
1 Thessalonians 4:13-18 has long been the quintessential Pauline
text on the parousia of Christ. Nowhere else does Paul reveal a
more vivid picture of Christ's coming. The apostle Paul employs a
number of images to describe the parousia to the Thessalonian
congregation who have become anxious, grief-stricken, and
despairing in the midst of the loss of their loved ones. Until
recently scholars have held that Paul's use of imagery in 1 Thess.
4:13-18 was either inspired by Greco-Roman imperial categories or
Jewish apocalyptic categories. Michael E. Peach provides a fresh
examination of imagery in 1 Thess. 4:13-18 arguing that Paul
synthesizes both the Jewish and Greco-Roman imagery. With careful
analysis, Peach traces the history of interpretation of Pauline
eschatology finding patterns of thought concerning the source of
inspiration of Paul's use of imagery. Utilizing these patterns, the
author further examines the meaning and function of four images
employed by Paul: "a loud command," "the sound of an archangel,"
"the trumpet of God," and "the meeting of the Lord." Ultimately,
Peach's discoveries demonstrate that Paul synthesizes apocalyptic
and Greco-Roman triumph imagery to create a dramatic mosaic of the
apocalyptic triumph, the parousia of Jesus Christ.
«My Share of God's Reward refers to a quote from Ignatius of
Antioch, speaking of the desired compensation for his impending
martyrdom. The author investigates the roles and widely varying
conceptions of the afterlife presented in early Christian martyrdom
accounts and concludes that personal immortality is integral to the
functioning of these texts, as the anticipated reward for a
martyr's death. Accordingly, the very diverse conceptions of the
afterlife presented in them are indicative of the frequently
ignored theological diversity and experimental spirit prevalent in
both early Christianity and late Second Temple Judaism. The
discussion also incorporates a unique definition of martyrdom that
recognizes the genealogical and developmental connections between
Christian martyrdom and its antecedents.
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Luke 18:35-24:53, Volume 35C
(Hardcover)
John Nolland; Edited by (general) Bruce M. Metzger, David Allen Hubbard, Glenn W. Barker; Series edited by John D.W. Watts, …
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Discovery Miles 11 920
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The Word Biblical Commentary delivers the best in biblical
scholarship, from the leading scholars of our day who share a
commitment to Scripture as divine revelation. This series
emphasizes a thorough analysis of textual, linguistic, structural,
and theological evidence. The result is judicious and balanced
insight into the meanings of the text in the framework of biblical
theology. These widely acclaimed commentaries serve as exceptional
resources for the professional theologian and instructor, the
seminary or university student, the working minister, and everyone
concerned with building theological understanding from a solid base
of biblical scholarship. Overview of Commentary Organization
Introduction-covers issues pertaining to the whole book, including
context, date, authorship, composition, interpretive issues,
purpose, and theology. Each section of the commentary includes:
Pericope Bibliography-a helpful resource containing the most
important works that pertain to each particular pericope.
Translation-the author's own translation of the biblical text,
reflecting the end result of exegesis and attending to Hebrew and
Greek idiomatic usage of words, phrases, and tenses, yet in
reasonably good English. Notes-the author's notes to the
translation that address any textual variants, grammatical forms,
syntactical constructions, basic meanings of words, and problems of
translation. Form/Structure/Setting-a discussion of redaction,
genre, sources, and tradition as they concern the origin of the
pericope, its canonical form, and its relation to the biblical and
extra-biblical contexts in order to illuminate the structure and
character of the pericope. Rhetorical or compositional features
important to understanding the passage are also introduced here.
Comment-verse-by-verse interpretation of the text and dialogue with
other interpreters, engaging with current opinion and scholarly
research. Explanation-brings together all the results of the
discussion in previous sections to expose the meaning and intention
of the text at several levels: (1) within the context of the book
itself; (2) its meaning in the OT or NT; (3) its place in the
entire canon; (4) theological relevance to broader OT or NT issues.
General Bibliography-occurring at the end of each volume, this
extensive bibliographycontains all sources used anywhere in the
commentary.
What is the most important lesson in the word of God? In Matt.
22:34-40, Jesus summarizes the whole Bible into two commandments,
being 'love for God' and 'love for thy neighbor' (Lev. 19:18). Why
did Jesus cite Lev. 19:18 (love) instead of 19:2 (holiness), which
is the core of this chapter? This book analyzes how Lev. 19 is
unfolded from OT times to the message of the NT. It attempts to
prove the importance of Lev. 19 in the canonical tradition of
Judaism and Christianity and to identify the clues which can help
to explain the reason why Jesus chose Lev. 19:18. Further, the book
shows that holiness, one of the main issues in Lev. 19, is replaced
by perfection in Matt. 5:48. This connection is shown through
examining the Community Rule (1QS) of the Dead Sea Scrolls, which
joins the themes of holiness and perfection. This combination
serves as the 'missing link' to bridge the gap between Lev. 19 and
Matt. 5. The method used to explore these texts is called 'a
canonical unfolding.' After a commentary on Lev. 19 the chapter is
compared to other connected texts. Finally, the meaning of Lev. 19
is reinterpreted in the whole context of the Canon.
The history of scholarship narrates a complicated past for the
interpretation of the -Shepherd Discourse in the Fourth Gospel.
Both the internal and contextual integrity of John 9: 39-10: 21
have been compromised by a misapplied analogy dividing the passage
into a parable and explanation structure, and by reading models
that favor historical approaches. As a result, the images and
figures encountered in the discourse have not been allowed their
full imaginative impact and the tendency is to look outside the
Gospel for their referents and explanations. The meaning of the
-Shepherd Discourse lies not in its relation to the rest of the
Fourth Gospel, but to that which is imported into the narrative.
Moreover, its function as the discourse to chapter 9, and in the
whole of the Gospel, is overlooked. Lewis employs the strategy of
rereading, borrowed from literary theory, to address the internal
integrity of the discourse and the relationship of the discourse to
the rest of the narrative. The literary phenomenon of rereading
highlights the interconnectedness of the whole of the discourse and
allows all of the imagery to be assessed at a figurative level.
Rereading also foregrounds the function of John 9: 39-10: 21 as the
discourse to the healing of the blind man in chapter nine, and
calls attention to the importance of the -Shepherd Discourse for
the interpretation of the Fourth Gospel, especially the
often-ignored image of Jesus as the door. This book suggests that
rereading is necessitated by the Gospel itself as a fundamental
feature of its unique theological expression."
In The Moral World of James, James Riley Strange compares the moral
system in the Epistle of James with other Greco-Roman and Judaic
texts. The author of the epistle prescribed moral practices in a
world in which other people, both pagan and Jewish, had long been
expressing similar concerns, and more would continue to take up the
task centuries after Christianity was well established in the Roman
Empire. In this fresh and thick analysis, Strange's systemic
comparison of texts (among them works of Plato, Plutarch,
Epictetus, and Aelius Aristides, as well as Greek Magical Papyri,
tractates of the Mishnah, and the Community Rule of the Dead Sea
Scrolls) reveals how James's vision of a distinctive way of
community life was both part of and distinct from the moral and
religious systems among which it emerged.
The metaphor of the cosmos as the Body of Christ offers an
opportunity to escape the aporias of standard Body of Christ
imagery, which has often proved anthropocentric, exclusivist,
triumphalist and/or sexist in the analyses of classical theologies.
The body motif in particular contains starting points for current
body discourses of gender-sensitive and ecological theologies,
especially in their mutual overlaps. This book offers a critical
evaluation of the prospects and boundaries of an updated metaphor
of the Body of Christ, especially in its cosmic dimension. The
first part of the book addresses the complex tradition in which the
universal dimension of cosmological Christologies is located,
including the thinking of the Apostles Paul and John, Origen,
Cusanus, Teilhard de Chardin, McFague, and Panikkar. In the second
part of the book, representatives of various innovative concepts
will contribute to the anthology. This is a wide-ranging study of
the implications of a new cosmic Body of Christ. As such, it will
be of interest to academics working in Religion and Gender,
Religion and the Environment, Theology and Christology.
Despite famously small numbers, Christians have had a distinctive
presence in modern Japan, particularly for their witness on behalf
of democracy and religious freedom. A translation of Ken'i to
Fukuju: Kindai Nihon ni okeru Roma-sho Jusan-sho (2003), Authority
and Obedience is "a personal pre-history" of the postwar generation
of Japanese Christian intellectuals deeply committed to democracy.
Using Japanese Christians' commentary on Paul's injunction in
Romans 13: 1-7, the counsel to "let every person be subject to the
governing authorities; for there is no authority except from
God...", Miyata offers an intellectual history of how Japanese
Christians understood the emperor-focused modern state from the
time of the first Protestant missionaries in the mid-nineteenth
century through the climax and demise of fascism during the Pacific
War. Stressing verse 5's admonition to "conscience" as the reason
for obedience, Miyata provides a clear and political perspective
grounded in his lifelong engagement with German political thought
and theology, particularly that of Karl Barth and Dietrich
Bonhoeffer, as he calls for a conscientious citizenry in his modern
society. Showing both Christians' complicity with the state and the
empire - including the formation of a unified church, the Nihon
Kirisuto Kyodan - and their attitude toward Christians in Asia, and
the complexity of the critical voices of Christians like Uchimura
Kanzo, Kashiwagi Gien, Nanbara Shigeru, and many others less well
known - Miyata's work aims not at exposing cultural particularity
but at showing how the modern Japanese Christian experience can
give meaning to a theology and a political theory of how to live
within the "freedom of religious belief".
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