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Leander E. Keck presents a series of essays, sermons and lectures
from a long career, their subjects ranging from historicity to the
importance of listening and sympathy. Echoes of the Word suggests
that now is the time for introspection among Christians: facing a
crisis of secularisation, he calls not merely for unity, but for a
period of serious and reflective thought. Grounding his arguments
in a profound understanding of both the Biblical texts and their
historical context, Keck offers a deep analysis of how Christianity
has been influenced by new converts down the centuries who brought
their own philosophies to the table, and speaks movingly of how
essential it is to love one another as Christ loved us.
This new addition to the New Interpreter's Bible brand is a
nine-volume set of the commentary-only from the New Interpreter's
Bible Commentary. The New Interpreter's Bible Commentary offers
critically sound biblical interpretations. Guided by scholars,
pastors and laity representing diverse traditions and academic
experience, this collection of commentary meets the needs of
preachers, teachers, and all students of the Bible. Easy-To-Use
Format A detailed, critical commentary providing an exegetical
"close-reading" of the biblical text Reflections that present a
detailed exposition of issues raised in the biblical text
Introductions to each book that cover essential historical,
sociocultural, literary, and theological issues An ecumenical
roster of contributors Comprehensive, concise articles Numerous
visual aids (illustrations, maps, charts, timelines) enhance use
For half a century Leander Keck thought, taught, and wrote about
the New Testament. He first served as a Professor of New Testament
at Vanderbilt Divinity School and Emory University's Candler School
of Theology before becoming Dean and Professor of Biblical Theology
at Yale Divinity School. Keck's lifelong work on Jesus and Paul was
a catalyst for the emerging discussions of New Testament
Christology and Pauline theology in the Society of Biblical
Literature and the Studiorum Novi Testamenti Societas. Keck wrote a
staggering number of now industry-standard articles on the New
Testament. Here, they are all collected for the first time. In Why
Christ Matters and Christ's First Theologian, readers will discover
how Keck gave new answers to old questions even as he carefully
reframed old answers into new questions. Keck's work is a treasure
trove of historical, exegetical, and theological interpretation.
For half a century Leander Keck thought, taught, and wrote about
the New Testament. He first served as a Professor of New Testament
at Vanderbilt Divinity School and Emory University's Candler School
of Theology before becoming Dean and Professor of Biblical Theology
at Yale Divinity School. Keck's lifelong work on Jesus and Paul was
a catalyst for the emerging discussions of New Testament
Christology and Pauline theology in the Society of Biblical
Literature and the Studiorum Novi Testamenti Societas. Keck wrote a
staggering number of now industry-standard articles on the New
Testament. Here, they are all collected for the first time. In
Christ's First Theologian and Why Christ Matters , readers will
discover how Keck gave new answers to old questions even as he
carefully reframed old answers into new questions. Keck's work is a
treasure trove of historical, exegetical, and theological
interpretation.
Keck shows how the church is suffering from malaise brought on
by oversecularization in aspects of church life including worship,
theology, ethos, and communication.
This penetrating clarion call to renewal cuts through the
conventional ideological labels of "liberal" and "conservative."
Keck argues with passion that mainline churches today must neither
pretend to be culturally triumphant nor whimper in fear. Rather,
the church has grounds to be confident about its proper nature and
mission.
Keck envisions a renewed church that has recovered a sense of
what is basic to its nature and purpose--restoring the praise of
God to the center of worship.
Like widely differing siblings raised by the same parents, each
letter produced by Paul has its own distinguishing character. For
the historically minded critic, each letter s unique traits provide
important clues for detecting the circumstances in which Paul wrote
it as well as what he hoped to achieve with it. Scholars assume
that by examining the content of the letter (the answer ), they can
infer the readers situation that Paul is addressing (the question
)--a method sometimes called mirror reading. In the case of Romans,
however, both the particular traits and the overall content are so
unusual that scholars continue to debate why Paul wrote precisely
this letter and what he hoped to achieve by it in Rome."
So begins Leander Keck's seminal work on the New Testament book
of Romans. Keck asserts that because Romans is part of the New
Testament, we can compare it with the other letters ascribed to
Paul, as well as with what Acts reports about his message and
mission. But the first readers of Romans had only this letter; they
could compare it only with what they may have heard about him.
While this commentary does from time to time compare Romans with
what Paul had said before, it concentrates on Romans itself; what
Paul says in this text should not be conflated with--nor inflated
into--what he thought comprehensively, though it is essential to
understand that as well.
"We do not really need another major commentary on Romans] that
loses us in the minutiae of word studies, literary parallels,
sociological and rhetorical hypotheses; we have such in plenty. The
Abingdon series, however, by its limited size, forces the
contributor to focus on the primary task of the commentator: to
clarify the meaning (intended or potential) of the words of the
text and to provide some basic reflection on its/their continuing
significance. And that is where Keck excels." - James D. G. Dunn,
Review of Biblical Literature 04/2006."
In Who Is Jesus? Keck clarifies the difference between the way
Jesus is presented in the Gospels and the way critical historians
portray him. He then explores, from four perspectives, Jesus'
contemporary moral and theological pertinence. Keck looks initially
at Jesus as a first-century Jew, then considers how Jesus' mission
was energized by his grasp of the kingdom of God. He goes on to
probe the meaning of the crucifixion of Jesus in light of the
biblical understanding of God's holiness, a theme largely neglected
today. Keck concludes his discussion by looking at Jesus' role in
the moral life of the Christian community.
In this revised and enlarged edition, Leander E. Keck presents a
succinct, comprehensive, and up-to-date scholarly interpretation of
Paul's theology. Keck has revised the volume to account more fully
for Paul's understanding of the law and of faith/trust. He has
retained the basic structure of the first edition but now apprises
the reader of specific details of his own continuing thinking in
light of select scholarly discussions. Entirely new to the volume
is an appendix, Paul's Theology in Historical Criticism, a summary
of the scholarly effort to account for, understand, and interpret
Paul's theology.
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