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Revelation of God and/as Human Reception in the New Testament (Paperback)
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Revelation of God and/as Human Reception in the New Testament (Paperback)
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Where does God s revelation reside, in the event or in the
interpretation? If history is about the creation of meaning, what
does it mean to say that God reveals God s self in history? Those
who take seriously scripture as revelatory must wrestle with such
fundamental questions and their far-reaching implications. Dan Via
addresses these and related issues in this original volume. The
title of the book, particularly the and/as, demands exposition. To
speak of God s revelation and human reception is to suggest that
God s self-disclosure is something other than and prior to the
human response that it elicits. To speak of God s
self-manifestation as human reception is to suggest that revelation
does not occur apart from the specific ways in which it is received
by human beings and that human response is in fact, a positive and
constitutive factor in the actualization of revelation. In brief,
then, this book is a study of what several New Testament writers
understand by the revelation of God to humankind, including both
the and and the as. An opening chapter sketches in a selective way
a provisional definition of revelation that embraces a horizon
reaching back into neo-orthodoxy while also coming close to the
present. Then follow chapters on the word as content and the
elusive historical element, including the place of the historical
Jesus in revelation; a discussion of Paul based on 2 Cor.
2:14-4:15, with special reference to the four elements of the
revelation situation; the use of the historical setting of Mark as
a constituent of actualized revelation for all four Gospels
followed by similar chapters on Mathew and John. A concluding
chapter redescribes the four constituent elements of the revelation
situation and relects on some of their interrelationships. Here,
then, is a resourceful and thorough study of an important issue in
New Testament and systematic theology, and one that takes human
action and reception into full account. Dan O. Via is Emeritus
Professor of New Testament as Duke University Divinity School and
author of Self-Deception and Wholeness in Paul and Matthew.
General
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