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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Christianity > The Bible
The New Century Youth Bible, first published in 1993, has
consistently been among the top three selling Bibles in the UK.
This revised edition brings the Youth Bible right up-to-date for
the twenty-first century. Whilst retaining the original Anglicized
text, this revised edition has over 25 of its Life Files replaced
or updated. There are also new categories on subjects such as
music, euthanasia and the environment.
We are living in exciting times, where God is stirring His
daughters to step up and grasp hold of His Kingdom purposes, daring
to apply His truth to their lives at new levels. In so doing, they
are influencing others to do the same - and the Kingdom is rapidly
growing stronger as a result. Patricia Talbott is one of these
women at the forefront, and her book will be a powerful tool to
help release this great potential. Cherie Minton, Co-Founder, Hope
Force International I have known Patricia for 20 years, and from
the time I met her I knew she was a woman of purpose and destiny.
She is also a woman of discernment, wisdom, courage, prayer,
determination, obedience, faith and commitment For women of all
ages this is a wonderful book containing Biblical truth, with
application. Patricia has found such treasures in these women's
lives, treasures that can be become part of our lives today. She
has already incorporated many of these values in her own life, so
she writes with authority. I highly recommend this book for
individual and group study, for processing and for reflection.
Donna Ruth Jordan, YWAM Associates
Although consistently overlooked or dismissed, John 8.6, 8 in the
Pericope Adulterae is the only place in canonical or non-canonical
Jesus tradition that portrays Jesus as writing. After establishing
that John 8.6, 8 is indeed a claim that Jesus could write, this
book offers a new interpretation and transmission history of the
Pericope Adulterae. Not only did the pericope's interpolator place
the story in John's Gospel in order to highlight the claim that
Jesus could write, but he did so at John 7.53-8.11 as a result of
carefully reading the Johannine narrative. The final chapter of the
book proposes a plausible socio-historical context for the
insertion of the story.
This two-part commentary argues that Chronicles, placed as it is
among the 'historical books' in the traditional Old Testament of
the Christian church, is much misunderstood. Restored to its proper
position as the final book in the canon as arranged in the order of
the Hebrew Bible, it is rather to be understood as a work of
theology essentially directed towards the future. The Chronicler
begins his work with the problem facing the whole human race in
Adam-the forfeiture of the ideal of perfect oneness with God's
purpose. He explores the possibility of the restoration of that
ideal through Israel's place at the centre of the world of the
nations. This portrayal reaches its climax in an idealized
presentation of the reign of Solomon, in which all the rulers of
the earth, including most famously the Queen of Sheba, bring their
tribute in acknowledgment of Israel's status (Volume 1). As
subsequent history only too clearly shows, however, the Chronicler
argues (Volume 2), that Israel itself, through unfaithfulness to
Torah, has forfeited its right to possession of its land and is
cast adrift among these same nations of the world. But the
Chronicler's message is one of hope. By a radical transformation of
the chronology of Israel's past into theological terms, the
generation whom the Chronicler addresses becomes the fiftieth since
Adam. It is the generation to whom the jubilee of return to the
land through a perfectly enabled obedience to Torah, and thus the
restoration of the primal ideal of the human race, is
announced.>
The story of Abraham and Isaac is a story of near universal
importance. Sitting near the core of three of the world's great
religious traditions, this nineteen verse story opens a world of
interpretive possibilities, raising questions of family, loyalty,
faith, and choices that are common to all.This collection of essays
takes up the question of how our interpretation of this pivotal
text has changed over time, and how, even in unlikely intellectual
places, the story influences our thought.It begins by exploring
various readings of Abraham and the Akedah story throughout the
traditional lenses of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. From there,
it moves into modern and postmodern readings, including how such
varied thinkers as Kant and Kierkegaard, Kafka and Derrida have
enaged the text.The book demonstrates the diversity of
interpretations, and the dramatic impact of the story on the
western intellectual tradition.
"Hierapolis in the Heavens" is a project which brings together
several articles and essays that Kreitzer has written on the letter
to the Ephesians and follows up a new suggestion which he first put
forward in 1997 as to the setting and provenance of the epistle.
Nothing quite like this has yet been published on Ephesians,
particularly as it does offer some important new archaeological,
textual and numismatic evidence for scholarly consideration. The
book should also be of interest to social-historians of the
first-century world as it argues that the letter we know as
"Ephesians" was written to what was, in effect, a daughter-church
of the church in Colossae; some intriguing questions about
power-relations between churches such as this are opened up as a
result.It was formerly known as "The Journal for the Study of the
New Testament Supplement", a book series that explores the many
aspects of New Testament study including historical perspectives,
social-scientific and literary theory, and theological, cultural
and contextual approaches. "The Early Christianity in Context"
series, a part of JSNTS, examines the birth and development of
early Christianity up to the end of the third century CE. The
series places Christianity in its social, cultural, political and
economic context. European Seminar on Christian Origins is also
part of JSNTS. "Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus
Supplement" is also part of JSNTS.
Did Zechariah really see visions? This question cannot be
definitely answered, so the idea must remain a hypothesis. Here,
Tiemeyer shows that this hypothesis is nonetheless reasonable and
instrumental in shedding light on matters in Zechariah's vision
report that are otherwise unclear. Tracking through each verse of
the text, the key exegetical problems are covered, including the
topics of the distinction between visions and dreams, dream
classification, conflicting sources of evidence for dream
experiences, and rhetorical imagery as opposed to dream experience.
Further attention is focused on the transmission of the divine
message to Zechariah, with the key question raised of whether a
visual or oral impression is described. Tiemeyer's study further
demonstrates that Zech 1-6 depicts a three-tier reality. This
description seeks to convey the seer's visionary experience to his
readers. In a trance state, Zechariah communicates with the
Interpreting Angel, while also receiving glimpses of a deeper
reality known as the 'visionary world.'
Given the dearth of non-messianic interpretations of Psalm 110:1 in
non-Christian Second Temple Jewish texts, why did it become such a
widely used messianic prooftext in the New Testament and early
Christianity? Previous attempts to answer this question have
focused on why the earliest Christians first began to use Ps 110:1.
The result is that these proposals do not provide an adequate
explanation for why first century Christians living in the Greek
East employed the verse and also applied it to Jesus's exaltation.
I contend that two Greco-Roman politico-religious practices, royal
and imperial temple and throne sharing-which were cross-cultural
rewards that Greco-Roman communities bestowed on beneficent, pious,
and divinely approved rulers-contributed to the widespread use of
Ps 110:1 in earliest Christianity. This means that the earliest
Christians interpreted Jesus's heavenly session as messianic and
thus political, as well as religious, in nature.
This book discusses the theory that the Psalter was compiled with
the specific intention that it should be used as a book for private
spiritual reading. It is argued that if this were so, the work of
the final editors would not have been confined to arranging the
psalms in a particular order but would have included additions and
interpolations intended to give the whole book a new orientation.
An investigation of selected psalms shows that although the Psalter
may have become a book for private devotion not long after its
compilation, there is little evidence that it was compiled for that
purpose.
This two-part commentary argues that Chronicles, placed as it is
among the 'historical books' in the traditional Old Testament of
the Christian church, is much misunderstood. Restored to its proper
position as the final book in the canon as arranged in the order of
the Hebrew Bible, it is rather to be understood as a work of
theology essentially directed towards the future. The Chronicler
begins his work with the problem facing the whole human race in
Adam-the forfeiture of the ideal of perfect oneness with God's
purpose. He explores the possibility of the restoration of that
ideal through Israel's place at the centre of the world of the
nations. This portrayal reaches its climax in an idealized
presentation of the reign of Solomon, in which all the rulers of
the earth, including most famously the Queen of Sheba, bring their
tribute in acknowledgment of Israel's status (Volume 1). As
subsequent history only too clearly shows, however, the Chronicler
argues (Volume 2), that Israel itself, through unfaithfulness to
Torah, has forfeited its right to possession of its land and is
cast adrift among these same nations of the world. But the
Chronicler's message is one of hope. By a radical transformation of
the chronology of Israel's past into theological terms, the
generation whom the Chronicler addresses becomes the fiftieth since
Adam. It is the generation to whom the jubilee of return to the
land through a perfectly enabled obedience to Torah, and thus the
restoration of the primal ideal of the human race, is
announced.>
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