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Stimulated by the signal contributions that New Testament scholar
Richard B. Hays has made to Christology and Christian ethics, the
essays collected here carry forward conversations involving close
studies of particular passages in the Gospels and Epistles and
wider-ranging forays into big questions in those fields. Some
essays build on Hays's work, pushing forward in new directions on
questions of scriptural intertextuality, Christology, and
participation in Christ. Others challenge his work on questions of
method and substance alike. But all reflect appreciation for the
advances made by this giant of twentieth and twenty-first century
New Testament scholarship.
Gain Insights on Mark's Christology from Today's Leading Scholars
The Gospel of Mark, widely assumed to be the earliest narrative of
Jesus's life and the least explicit in terms of Christology, has
long served as a worktable for the discovery of Christian origins
and developing theologies. The past ten years of scholarship have
seen an unprecedented shift toward an early, high Christology, the
notion that very early in the history of the Jesus movement his
followers worshipped him as God. Other studies have challenged this
view, arguing that Mark's story is incomplete, intentionally
ambiguous, or presents Jesus in entirely human terms. Christology
in Mark's Gospel: Four Views brings together key voices in
conversation in order to offer a clear entry point into early
Christians' understanding of Jesus's identity: Sandra Huebenthal
(Suspended Christology), Larry W. Hurtado (Mark's Presentation of
Jesus; with rejoinder by Chris Keith), J. R. Daniel Kirk (Narrative
Christology of a Suffering King), and Adam Winn (Jesus as the YHWH
of Israel in the Gospel of Mark). Each author offers a robust
presentation of their position, followed by lively interaction with
the other contributors and one "last-word" rejoinder. The
significance of this discussion is contextualized by the general
editor Anthony Le Donne's introduction and summarized in the
conclusion. The CriticalPoints Series offers rigorous and nuanced
engagement between today's best scholars for advancing the
scholarship of tomorrow. Like its older sibling, the CounterPoints
Series, it provides a forum for comparison and critique of
different positions, focusing on critical issues in today's
Christian scholarship: in biblical studies, in theology, and in
philosophy.
If the God of Israel has acted to save his people through Christ,
but Israel is not participating in that salvation, how then can
this God be considered righteous? Unlocking Romans is directed in
large extent toward answering this question in order to illuminate
the righteousness of God as revealed in the book of Romans. The
answer here, J. R. Daniel Kirk claims, comes mainly in terms of
resurrection. Even if only the most obvious references in Romans
are considered -- and Kirk certainly delves more deeply than that
-- the theme of resurrection appears not only in every section of
the letter but also at climactic moments of Paul's argument. The
network of connections among Jesus' resurrection, Israel's
Scriptures, and redefining the people of God serves to affirm God's
fidelity to Israel. This, in turn, demonstrates Paul's gospel
message to be a witness to the revelation of the righteousness of
God.
Thought-provoking alternative perspective on the full humanity of
Jesus Christ In A Man Attested by God J. R. Daniel Kirk presents a
comprehensive defense of the thesis that the Synoptic Gospels
present Jesus not as divine but as an idealized human figure.
Counterbalancing the recent trend toward early high Christology in
such scholars as Richard Bauckham, Simon Gathercole, and Richard
Hays, Kirk here thoroughly unpacks the humanity of Jesus as
understood by Gospel writers whose language is rooted in the
religious and literary context of early Judaism. Without dismissing
divine Christologies out of hand, Kirk argues that idealized human
Christology is the best way to read the Synoptic Gospels, and he
explores Jesus as exorcist and miracle worker within the framework
of his humanity. With wide-ranging exegetical and theological
insight that sheds startling new light on familiar Gospel texts, A
Man Attested by God offers up-to-date, provocative scholarship that
will have to be reckoned with.
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