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The voice of Jesus has for centuries been obscured and his vision
skewed even by well-intended gospel writers, who transmitted his
words to serve their own concerns. The Gospel of Jesus frees Jesus'
voice from the accretions of time and lets his challe
There were four different portraits of Paul in the early church:
the non-authoritarian Paul of the great Letters, the authoritarian,
misogynist Paul of the Pastoral Epistles, the frenetic missionary
who single-handedly introduced Christianity to the Mediterranean
world, and the proto- Gnostic Paul of Marcion and the Gnostic
commentaries on Paul s letters. Which is the real Paul? The
Christian church opted for the Pastoral Epistles, and so read Paul
letters through that lens. But that image has become so problematic
in the modern world that many contemporary readers are either put
off by Paul or simply ignore him. But was Paul really such a
frightful figure? In providing a fresh reading of Paul s authentic
letters, the SV translators have attempted to liberate his words
from those of Augustine, and later Martin Luther, who used Paul to
cover their own guilty consciences. This Augustinian-Lutheran
tradition of interpreting Paul s discourses about justification by
faith as a way of dealing with their own sense of moral failure,
for instance, represents but one way of translating Paul s letters.
The Greek of Paul s writings can be understood rather differently
so that Paul s message is not about personal guilt, but about the
trustworthiness of God, and Jesus courageous faith in God as a role
model for others. This is how Paul s letters are translated in this
book. Here readers will encounter a very different view of Paul and
his message.
There were four different portraits of Paul in the early church:
the non-authoritarian Paul of the great Letters, the authoritarian,
misogynist Paul of the Pastoral Epistles, the frenetic missionary
who single-handedly introduced Christianity to the Mediterranean
world, and the proto- Gnostic Paul of Marcion and the Gnostic
commentaries on Paul s letters. Which is the real Paul? The
Christian church opted for the Pastoral Epistles, and so read Paul
letters through that lens. But that image has become so problematic
in the modern world that many contemporary readers are either put
off by Paul or simply ignore him. But was Paul really such a
frightful figure? In providing a fresh reading of Paul s authentic
letters, the SV translators have attempted to liberate his words
from those of Augustine, and later Martin Luther, who used Paul to
cover their own guilty consciences. This Augustinian-Lutheran
tradition of interpreting Paul s discourses about justification by
faith as a way of dealing with their own sense of moral failure,
for instance, represents but one way of translating Paul s letters.
The Greek of Paul s writings can be understood rather differently
so that Paul s message is not about personal guilt, but about the
trustworthiness of God, and Jesus courageous faith in God as a role
model for others. This is how Paul s letters are translated in this
book. Here readers will encounter a very different view of Paul and
his message.
The voice of Jesus has for centuries been obscured and his vision
skewed even by well-intended gospel writers, who transmitted his
words to serve their own concerns. The Gospel of Jesus frees Jesus'
voice from the accretions of time and lets his challenging wisdom
stand out as never before. This single composite gospel, created
out of the sayings and reports that were deemed probably historical
by the Jesus Seminar, is an essential resource for anyone seeking
to detect the words of Jesus as they were heard by his earliest
listeners. Features of the new edition: New introduction Updated
translation and notes Expanded index of sayings and stories
User-friendly format
An essential resource for the analytical study of the gospels, The
Complete Gospel Parallels goes beyond the standard parallels. This
book gives those who study the gospels in English a one-volume
compendium of synopses not only for the Gospels of Matthew, Mark,
Luke, and John, but also for the Gospels of Thomas and Peter, as
well as for a few gospel fragments (the Egerton Gospel, Gospel
Oxyrhynchus 1224, as well as the Jewish-Christian Gospels of the
Hebrews and the Nazoreans). The Complete Gospel Parallels also
includes a synopsis for the reconstructed Q Gospel, which enables
the reader both to discern how the text of Q can be derived and how
Q was adopted and adapted by Matthew and Luke. The Complete Gospel
Parallels features the fresh and vibrant Scholars Version
translation, which has been thoroughly revised and fine-tuned to
facilitate the precise comparison of parallel passages, using
consistent English for the same Greek and different English where
the originals vary. The Complete Gospel Parallels lucid
translation, its easy-to-use format, and its broad range of gospel
materials will enhance and deepen the serious reader s appreciation
of early Christian tradition and literature.
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Once and Future Faith (Paperback)
Robert W Funk, Karen Armstrong, Don Cupitt, Arthur J Dewey, Lloyd Geering, …
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R628
Discovery Miles 6 280
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Many ideas once thought to be foundational to Christianity are now
known to be false due to scientific discoveries regarding the
nature of the universe and historical findings about how
Christianity began. Is Christianity doomed to irrelevance or even
extinction? How might Christianity reinvent itself so that it can
address the real concerns of people in today's world? This
collection of essays from such leading thinkers as Karen Armstrong
and John Shelby Spong addresses questions such as life after death,
the meaning of God, apocalypticism, and the significance of Jesus'
death. Contributors: Karen Armstrong, Don Cupitt, Arthur J. Dewey,
Robert W. Funk, Lloyd Geering, Roy W. Hoover, Robert J. Miller,
Stephen J. Patterson, Bernard Brandon Scott, John Shelby Spong
In order to demonstrate how the crucifixion narrative emerged and
changed over time, this historical primer on the death of Jesus
includes an overview of the evidence that Jesus existed and was
crucified, explanations of how crucifixion worked and why it was
employed by the Romans, and descriptions of Jesus' death in early
Christian literature in a logical progression from the earliest to
latest.
Theology at its best lends rhythm and rhyme to the raw energy of
life. It improvises on this world without trying to escape to a
heaven somewhere else. In this curated collection of radio
commentaries and editorials, Art Dewey invites readers to remain
open to new meaning as it arises from our encounters with
neighbors, strangers, and friends. Through anecdotes and modern
parables touched with humor and curiosity, he blends ancient and
modern attempts to make sense of who we are and where we're going.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
The event of Jesus' resurrection is like the event of creation:
There were no eye-witnesses. So how does one make sense of the
story of the resurrection - or rather stories, for not one but many
diverse reports survive from early Christianity? Brandon Scott
suggests that we must begin by erasing all Christian art about the
resurrection from our memory. And then forget all the sermons we
heard at Easter. The best way to understand the resurrection, he
argues, is to arrange the texts chronologically and observe how the
story itself developed. ""The Resurrection of Jesus: A Sourcebook""
begins with just such a list, compiled with commentaries by Robert
W. Funk.It proceeds to a report of the Jesus Seminar's votes on the
resurrection, followed by a collection and discussion by Robert
Price of resurrection stories found in the Greek culture of Jesus'
day, and an in-depth study by Arthur Dewey of a little-known
resurrection story in the ""Gospel of Peter"". Philosopher Thomas
Sheehan concludes the volume with two essays that help put the
pieces back together again, in ways that make sense in the modern
world.
What difference does scholarship on the historical Jesus make for
the way we think about the meaning of Christian faith in the
twenty-first century? In "The Historical Jesus Goes To Church,
biblical scholars--Fellows of the Jesus Seminar--speak directly to
the ways in which new knowledge of the Jesus of history requires
and enables us to think differently about the significance of Jesus
and about the reliability and authority of the Bible. They also
imagine what these new understandings imply for public worship,
preaching, prayer and practice, and life in community. These
articles evoke the spirit of Paul, Christianity's first theologian,
who like us found himself standing at the intersection of two eras
and knew that he had to let go of his past if he hoped to have a
future.
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Profiles of Jesus (Paperback)
Robert W Funk, Roy W. Hoover, Marcus Borg, Kathleen E Corley, John Dominic Crossan, …
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R641
Discovery Miles 6 410
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Can the authentic words and deed of Jesus identified by the Jesus
Seminar furnish a sufficient basis for a credible profile of the
Jesus of history? That is the challenge faced by the contributors
to this volume. Their efforts have resulted in a unique collection
of studied impressions of Jesus. Here readers will see not Jesus
the icon of myth and creed, but a provocative young man of
first-century Palestine whose vision and determination to live the
vision gave birth to a new form of faith and changed the course of
history.
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