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Showing 1 - 25 of
44 matches in All Departments
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1 & 2 Peter (Paperback)
Douglas Harink; Edited by (general) R. Reno; Series edited by Robert Jenson, Robert Wilken, Ephraim Radner, …
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R769
Discovery Miles 7 690
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This addition to the well-received Brazos Theological Commentary on
the Bible offers a theological exegesis of 1 & 2 Peter. This
commentary, like each in the series, is designed to serve the
church--through aid in preaching, teaching, study groups, and so
forth--and demonstrate the continuing intellectual and practical
viability of theological interpretation of the Bible. "The Brazos
Theological Commentary exists to provide an accessible authority so
that the preacher's application will be a ready bandage for all the
hurts of life. The Brazos Commentary offers just the right level of
light to make illuminating the word the joy it was meant to
be."--Calvin Miller, author of A Hunger for the Holy and Loving God
Up Close
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Jonah (Paperback)
Phillip Cary; Edited by (general) R. Reno; Series edited by Robert Jenson, Robert Wilken, Ephraim Radner, …
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R722
Discovery Miles 7 220
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Pastors and leaders of the classical church--such as Augustine,
Calvin, Luther, and Wesley--interpreted the Bible theologically,
believing Scripture as a whole witnessed to the gospel of Jesus
Christ. Modern interpreters of the Bible questioned this premise.
But in recent decades, a critical mass of theologians and biblical
scholars has begun to reassert the priority of a theological
reading of Scripture. The Brazos Theological Commentary on the
Bible enlists leading theologians to read and interpret Scripture
for the twenty-first century, just as the church fathers, the
Reformers, and other orthodox Christians did for their times and
places. In the sixth volume in the series, Phillip Cary presents a
theological exegesis of Jonah.
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Psalms 1-50 (Hardcover)
Ellen T. Charry, William Brown, R. Reno, Robert Jenson, Ephraim Radner
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R255
R210
Discovery Miles 2 100
Save R45 (18%)
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Ships in 4 - 8 working days
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The biblical psalms are perhaps the most commented-upon texts in
human history. They are at once deeply alluring and deeply
troubling. In this addition to the acclaimed Brazos Theological
Commentary on the Bible, a highly respected scholar offers a
theological reading of Psalms 1-50, exploring the various voices in
the poems to discern the conversation they engage about God,
suffering, and hope as well as ways of community belonging. The
commentary examines the context of the psalms as worship--tending
to both their original setting and their subsequent Jewish and
Christian appropriation--and explores the psychological dynamics
facing the speaker. Foreword by William P. Brown.
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Numbers (Paperback)
David L. Stubbs, R. Reno, Robert Jenson, Robert Wilken, Ephraim Radner
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R793
Discovery Miles 7 930
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This ninth volume in the Brazos Theological Commentary on the Bible
offers a theological exegesis of Numbers. This commentary, like
each in the series, is designed to serve the church--through aid in
preaching, teaching, study groups, and so forth--and demonstrate
the continuing intellectual and practical viability of theological
interpretation of the Bible. "The Brazos Theological Commentary
exists to provide an accessible authority so that the preacher's
application will be a ready bandage for all the hurts of life. The
Brazos Commentary offers just the right level of light to make
illuminating the word the joy it was meant to be."--Calvin Miller,
author of A Hunger for the Holy and Loving God Up Close
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Ezekiel (Paperback)
Robert W. Jenson; Edited by (general) R. Reno; Series edited by Robert Jenson, Robert Wilken, Ephraim Radner, …
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R824
Discovery Miles 8 240
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Pastors and leaders of the classical church--such as Augustine,
Calvin, Luther, and Wesley--interpreted the Bible theologically,
believing Scripture as a whole witnessed to the gospel of Jesus
Christ. Modern interpreters of the Bible questioned this premise.
But in recent decades, a critical mass of theologians and biblical
scholars has begun to reassert the priority of a theological
reading of Scripture. The Brazos Theological Commentary on the
Bible enlists leading theologians to read and interpret Scripture
for the twenty-first century, just as the church fathers, the
Reformers, and other orthodox Christians did for their times and
places. In this addition to the series, esteemed theologian Robert
W. Jenson presents a theological exegesis of Ezekiel.
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1 & 2 Thessalonians (Paperback)
Douglas Farrow, R. Reno, Robert Jenson, Robert Wilken, Ephraim Radner
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R565
Discovery Miles 5 650
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The Brazos Theological Commentary on the Bible encourages readers
to explore how the vital roots of the ancient Christian tradition
inform and shape faithfulness today. In this volume, one of today's
leading theologians offers a theological reading of 1 and 2
Thessalonians. As with other series volumes, this commentary is
designed to serve the church, providing a rich resource for
preachers, teachers, students, and study groups.
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Ephesians (Paperback)
Michael Allen, R. Reno, Robert Jenson, Robert Wilken, Ephraim Radner
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R524
Discovery Miles 5 240
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Exodus (Paperback)
Thomas Joseph O White, R. Reno, Robert Jenson, Robert Wilken, Ephraim Radner
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R590
Discovery Miles 5 900
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Exodus recounts the origins of ancient Israel, but it is also a
book of religious symbols. How should it be interpreted, especially
in light of modern historical-critical study? In this addition to
an acclaimed series, a respected scholar offers a theological
reading of Exodus that highlights Aquinas's interpretations of the
text. As with other volumes in the series, this commentary is ideal
for those called to ministry, serving as a rich resource for
preachers, teachers, students, and study groups.
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Genesis (Paperback)
R. R. Reno; Edited by (general) R. Reno; Series edited by Robert Jenson, Robert Wilken, Ephraim Radner, …
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R761
Discovery Miles 7 610
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The Brazos Theological Commentary on the Bible enlists leading
theologians to read and interpret Scripture for the twenty-first
century, just as the church fathers, the Reformers, and other
orthodox Christians did for their times and places. In this
addition to the well-received series, esteemed theologian R. R.
Reno offers a theological exegesis of Genesis. This commentary,
like each in the series, is designed to serve the church--providing
a rich resource for preachers, teachers, students, and study
groups--and demonstrate the continuing intellectual and practical
viability of theological interpretation of the Bible.
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Galatians (Hardcover)
Kathryn Greene-mccreigh, R. Reno, Robert Jenson, Robert Wilken, Ephraim Radner
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R903
R729
Discovery Miles 7 290
Save R174 (19%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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The Brazos Theological Commentary on the Bible advances the
assumption that the Nicene creedal tradition, in all its diversity,
provides the proper basis for the interpretation of the Bible as
Christian scripture. The series volumes, written by leading
theologians, encourage readers to explore how the vital roots of
the ancient Christian tradition inform and shape faithfulness
today. In this addition to the series, respected theologian Kathryn
Greene-McCreight offers a theological reading of Galatians. As with
other volumes in the series, this commentary is designed to serve
the church, providing a rich resource for preachers, teachers,
students, and study groups. It demonstrates the continuing
intellectual and practical viability of theological interpretation
of the Bible.
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2 Samuel (Paperback)
Robert Barron, R. Reno, Robert Jenson, Robert Wilken, Ephraim Radner
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R595
Discovery Miles 5 950
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The Brazos Theological Commentary on the Bible encourages readers
to explore how the vital roots of the ancient Christian tradition
should inform and shape faithfulness today. In this addition to the
series, highly acclaimed author, speaker, and theologian Robert
Barron offers a theological exegesis of 2 Samuel. He highlights
three major themes: God's non-competitive transcendence, the play
between divine and non-divine causality, and the role of Old
Testament kingship. As with other volumes in the series, this book
is ideal for those called to ministry, serving as a rich resource
for preachers, teachers, students, and study groups.
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Luke (Paperback)
David Lyle Jeffrey, R. Reno, Robert Jenson, Robert Wilken, Ephraim Radner
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R588
Discovery Miles 5 880
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Highly acclaimed professor of literature David Lyle Jeffrey offers
a theological reading of Luke in this addition to the well-received
Brazos Theological Commentary on the Bible. This commentary, like
each in the series, is designed to serve the church--providing a
rich resource for preachers, teachers, students, and study
groups--and demonstrate the continuing intellectual and practical
viability of theological interpretation of the Bible.
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1 & 2 Kings (Paperback)
Peter J Leithart, R. Reno, Robert Jenson, Robert Wilken, Ephraim Radner
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R710
R577
Discovery Miles 5 770
Save R133 (19%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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1 and 2 Kings, like each volume in the Brazos Theological
Commentary on the Bible, is designed to serve the church--through
aid in preaching, teaching, study groups, and so forth--and
demonstrate the continuing intellectual and practical viability of
theological interpretation of the Bible.
Pastors and leaders of the classical church interpreted the Bible
theologically, believing Scripture as a whole witnessed to the
gospel of Jesus Christ. Modern interpreters of the Bible questioned
this premise. But in recent decades, a critical mass of theologians
and biblical scholars has begun to reassert the priority of a
theological reading of Scripture. The Brazos Theological Commentary
on the Bible enlists leading theologians to read and interpret
Scripture for the twenty-first century. In this addition to the
well-received series, Daniel Treier offers theological exegesis of
Proverbs and Ecclesiastes.
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1 & 2 Chronicles
Peter J Leithart; Edited by R. Reno, Robert Jenson, Robert Wilken, Ephraim Radner, …
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R902
Discovery Miles 9 020
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Joshua (Hardcover)
Paul R. Hinlicky, R. Reno, Robert Jenson, Robert Wilken, Ephraim Radner
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R778
R634
Discovery Miles 6 340
Save R144 (19%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Paul Hinlicky, a leading systematic theologian widely respected for
his contributions in contemporary dogmatics, offers a theological
reading of Joshua in this addition to the Brazos Theological
Commentary on the Bible series. Hinlicky compares and contrasts the
politics of purity and the politics of redemption in an innovative
and illuminating way and locates the book of Joshua in the
postexilic genesis of apocalyptic theology. As with other series
volumes, this commentary is designed to serve the church, providing
a rich resource for preachers, teachers, students, and study
groups.
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Ephesians (Hardcover)
Michael Allen; Edited by (general) R. Reno; Series edited by Robert Jenson, Robert Wilken, Ephraim Radner, …
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R710
Discovery Miles 7 100
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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The Brazos Theological Commentary on the Bible encourages readers
to explore how the vital roots of the ancient Christian tradition
inform and shape faithfulness today. In this volume, prominent
Reformed theologian Michael Allen offers a theological reading of
Ephesians. As with other series volumes, this commentary is
designed to serve the church, providing a rich resource for
preachers, teachers, students, and study groups.
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Leviticus (Paperback)
Ephraim Radner, R. Reno, Robert Jenson, Robert Wilken, Michael Root
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R985
Discovery Miles 9 850
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This volume, like each in the Brazos Theological Commentary on the
Bible, is designed to serve the church--through aid in preaching,
teaching, study groups, and so forth--and demonstrate the
continuing intellectual and practical viability of theological
interpretation of the Bible.
The miracle of birth and the mystery of death markhuman life.
Mortality, like a dark specter, looms over all that lies in
between. Human character, behavior, aims, and community are all
inescapably shaped by this certainty of human ends. Mortality, like
an unwanted guest, intrudes, becoming a burden and a constant
struggle. Mortality, like a thief who steals, even threatens the
ability to live life rightly. Life is short. Death is certain.
Mortality, at all costs, should be resisted or transcended. In A
Time to Keep Ephraim Radner revalues mortality, reclaiming it as
God's own. Mortality should notbe resisted butreceived. Radner
reveals mortality's true nature as a gift, God's gift, and thus
reveals that the many limitations that mortality imposes should be
celebrated. Radner demonstrates how faithfulnessaand not
resignation, escape, denial, redefinition, or excessais the proper
response to the gift of humanity's temporal limitation. To live
rightly is to recognize and then willingly accept life's
limitations. In chapters on sex and sexuality, singleness and
family, education and vocation, andapanoply of end of life issues,
A Time to Keep plumbs the depths of the secularimagination,
uncovering the constantstrugglewith human finitudein its
myriadforms. Radner shows thatby wrongly positioningcreaturely
mortality, these parts of human experience havereceivedan
inadequate reckoning. A Time to Keep retrieves the most basic
confession of the Christian faith, that life is God's, which Radner
offers as grace, asthe basis for a Christian understanding of human
existence bound by its origin and telos. Thepossibilityand
purposeof what comes between birth and deathisorderedby the pattern
of Scripture,but isperformed faithfully onlyin obedience to
thelimits that bind it.
In the march of modernity and the opening of global boundaries, the
face of the world changed. How we understood the world, and our
place in it, changed. And with that great shift, our concept of the
Holy Spirit also changed. Now the third person of the Trinity
became a diffusive power in a universalizing attempt at resolving
the expansively harsh realities of human existence. In A Profound
Ignorance , Ephraim Radnertraces the development of pneumatology as
a modern discipline and its responses to experiences of social
confusion and suffering, often associated with questions linked to
the category of theodicy. Along the way, study of the Spirit joined
with natural science to become study of spirit, which was at root
study of the human person redefined without limitation. Radner
proposes that the proper parameters of pneumatology are found in
studying Israel and her historical burdens as the Body of Christ,
showing how the Spirit is the reality of God that affirms the
redemptive character of Christ, the Son. The traumas of the
twentieth and twenty-first centuries have brought to the fore the
problematic distance between earlier and more modern approaches to
the Spirit. Drawing on writers from Paracelsus to John Berryman,
and including theologians and philosophers like Anne Conway and
John Wesley, as well as literary figures from d'AubignA (c) to
Duhamel, Radner attempts to locate modern pneumatology's motives
and interests within some of the novel social settings of a rapidly
globalizing consciousness and conflicted pluralism. It is by
following Israel into the Incarnation of Jesus, Radner contends,
that humans find their unresolved sufferings and yearnings
redeemed. The Holy Spirit operates in deep hope, the kind of hope
that is inaccessible to simple articulation. Finally, Radner argues
for a more limited and reserved pneumatology, subordinated to the
christological realities of divine incarnation: here, creaturely
limitations are not denied, but affirmed, and taken up into the
life of God.
In 11 essays by leading Anglican scholars, this book clarifies what
sets Anglicanism apart from other denominations and offers clarity
for the future of the communion.
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The Breath of God (Hardcover)
Etienne Veto; Foreword by Ephraim Radner
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R1,154
R917
Discovery Miles 9 170
Save R237 (21%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This seventh volume in the Brazos Theological Commentary on the
Bible offers a theological exegesis of 1st and 2nd Timothy, Titus,
Philemon, and Jude. This commentary, like each in the series, is
designed to serve the church--through aid in preaching, teaching,
study groups, and so forth--and demonstrate the continuing
intellectual and practical viability of theological interpretation
of the Bible.
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Discovery Miles 1 720
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