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Over his illustrious career, Raymond E. Brown, S.S., Ph.D., was
internationally regarded as a dean of New Testament scholars. He
was Auburn Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Biblical Studies at
Union Theological Seminary in New York City. He received over
thirty honorary degrees from Catholic and Protestant universities
worldwide, and was elected a (Corresponding) Fellow of the British
Academy and a member of the American Academy of Arts and
Sciences.In addition to serving as president of the Society of
Biblical Literature, the Catholic Biblical Association, and the
Society of New Testament Studies, two popes appointed Father Brown
as the sole American on the Pontifical Biblical Commission. Some of
the best known of his more than thirty-five books on the Bible are
three volumes in the "Anchor Bible" series on the Gospel and
Epistles of John, as well as the Anchor Bible Reference Library
volumes "The Birth of the Messiah", "The Death of the Messiah", and
"An Introduction to the New Testament", winner of the 1998 Catholic
Press Association Award for Biblical Studies. Father Brown's
untimely death on August 8, 1998, saddened all who knew him.
Over his illustrious career, Raymond E. Brown, S.S., Ph.D., was
internationally regarded as a dean of New Testament scholars. He
was Auburn Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Biblical Studies at
Union Theological Seminary in New York City. He received over
thirty honorary degrees from Catholic and Protestant universities
worldwide, and was elected a (Corresponding) Fellow of the British
Academy and a member of the American Academy of Arts and
Sciences.In addition to serving as president of the Society of
Biblical Literature, the Catholic Biblical Association, and the
Society of New Testament Studies, two popes appointed Father Brown
as the sole American on the Pontifical Biblical Commission. Some of
the best known of his more than thirty-five books on the Bible are
three volumes in the "Anchor Bible" series on the Gospel and
Epistles of John, as well as the Anchor Bible Reference Library
volumes "The Birth of the Messiah", "The Death of the Messiah", and
"An Introduction to the New Testament", winner of the 1998 Catholic
Press Association Award for Biblical Studies. Father Brown's
untimely death on August 8, 1998, saddened all who knew him.
This volume concludes Raymond E. Brown's commentary on the Gospel
of John. Continuing his study begun in Anchor Bible Volume 29, the
author translates the original Greek text into today's English.
which allows all readers to make sense of the Gospel. Father
Brown's notes and comments sort out the major issues surrounding
the writings of John -- questions of authorship, composition, date,
and John's relation to the Synoptic Gospels (Matthew, Mark, and
Luke). He analyzes and presents the scholarly debates in a form the
interested layperson can appreciate. John chapters 13-21 comprise
the Book of Glory (describing the Last Supper, the Passion, and the
appearances of the Risen Jesus) and the epilogue to the Gospel.
This commentary includes a special appendix on the Paraclete, in
which Brown examines in detail the role of the Holy Spirit. Whether
discussing John's version of miracle stories found in the other
Gospels, explaining the meaning of obscure Greek words, or showing
the relevance of Jesus' words and deeds, Father Brown speaks to
scholars and laypeople alike.
"A truly magnificent book, composed by our Catholic national
treasure."-Commonweal "This judicious and reassuring approach may
comfort many."-Anthony J. Saldarini, New York Times Book Review "A
tour de force."-America From the experience of a lifetime of
scholarship, preaching, teaching, and writing, Raymond E. Brown
covers the entire scope of the New Testament with ease and clarity.
He walks readers book by book through the basic content and issues
of the New Testament. While a wealth of information is contained in
these pages, the work's most impressive features are the basic
summaries of each book, a historical overview of the ancient
Greco-Roman world, discussions of key theological issues, and the
rich supplementary materials, such as illustrative tables, maps,
bibliographies, and appendixes. Using this basic data, Brown
answers questions raised by today's readers, relates the New
Testament to our modern world, and responds to controversial
issues, such as those raised by the Jesus Seminar. Every generation
needs a comprehensive, reliable Introduction to the New Testament
that opens the biblical text to the novice. Raymond E. Brown's An
Introduction to the New Testament is the most trustworthy and
authoritative guidebook for a generation seeking to understand the
Christian Bible. Universally acknowledged as the dean of New
Testament scholarship, Father Brown is a master of his discipline
at the pinnacle of his career. Who else could cover the entire
scope of the New Testament with such ease and clarity? This gifted
communicator conveys the heartfelt concern of a beloved teacher for
his students, as he walks the reader through the basic content and
issues of the New Testament. Those opening to the New Testament for
the first time and those seeking deeper insights could not ask for
more in a primer to the Christian Bible.
When Raymond E. Brown died in 1998, less than a year after the
publication of his masterpiece, An Introduction to the New
Testament, he left behind a nearly completed revision of his
acclaimed two-volume commentary on the Gospel of John. The
manuscript, skillfully edited by Francis J. Moloney, displays the
rare combination of meticulous scholarship and clear, engaging
writing that made Father Brown’s books consistently outsell other
works of biblical scholarship. An Introduction to the Gospel of
John represents the culmination of Brown’s long and intense
examination of part of the New Testament. One of the most important
aspects of this new book, particularly to the scholarly community,
is how it differs from the original commentary in several important
ways. It presents, for example, a new perspective on the historical
development of the Gospels, and shows how Brown decided to open his
work to literary readings of the text, rather than relying
primarily on the historical, which informed the original volumes.
In addition, there is an entire section devoted to Christology,
absent in the original, as well as a magisterial new section on the
representation of Jews in the Gospel of John.
A long-awaited abridgement of Raymond Brown's classic and
best-selling introduction to the New Testament Since its
publication in 1997, Raymond Brown's Introduction to the New
Testament has been widely embraced by modern readers seeking to
understand the Christian Bible. Acknowledged as a paragon of New
Testament studies in his lifetime, Brown was a gifted communicator
who wrote with ease and clarity. Abridged by Marion Soards, who
worked with Brown on the original text, this new, concise version
maintains the essence and centrist interpretation of the original
without tampering with Brown's perspective, insights, or
conclusions. The biblical writings themselves remain the focus, but
there are also chapters dealing with the nature, origin, and
interpretation of the New Testament texts, as well as chapters
concerning the political, social, religious, and philosophical
world of antiquity. Furthermore, augmenting Brown's commentary on
the New Testament itself are topics such as the Gospels'
relationship to one another; the form and function of ancient
letters; Paul's thought and life, along with his motivation,
legacy, and theology; a reflection on the historical Jesus; and a
survey of relevant Jewish and Christian writings. This
comprehensive, reliable, and authoritative guidebook is now more
accessible for novices, general readers, Bible study groups,
ministers, scholars, and students alike.
Over the past fity years the Roman Catholic Church's understanding
of the Bible opened up to modern scholarship in a way never before
imaginable, and at the center of this shift is Raymond Brown.
Today, both academic and general readers continue to find insight
and inspiration in his publications.
"New Testament Essays" brings together fourteen of Brown's early
works on subjects ranging from the ecumenical possibilities raised
by historical study of the Bible to the relationship between faith
and biblical research to the theology and history of the Gospel of
John, concisely capturing many of Brown's major concerns in the
clear and accessible voice for which he was so beloved. Brown had a
gift for bringing insightful scholarship to a wide audience, as
this collection makes clear, and his work ultimately shows that,
rather than posing a challenge to faith, historical criticism of
Scripture provides a path to deeper understanding of the Word of
God and its implications for the modern world.
In this new edition of "New Testament Essays," Father Ronald
Witherup, Brown's colleague, provides an introduction describing
Brown's life and work, his impact on biblical studies, and his
powerful legacy.
Father Brown completes his look at the great seasons of the
liturgical year, making the rich insights of modern biblical
exegesis conveniently available to all, with this volume for the
season from Easter to Pentecost.
During this season the Church reads consecutively from the Acts
of the Apostles, recounting the external life of the Church after
Pentecost. The accompanying readings from the Gospel according to
John portray the internal life of Christian disciples and promise a
coming Paraclete to be sent by the Father. Father Brown's title "A
Once-and-Coming Spirit" signifies these two great biblical sources
that he reflects on. He shows how these readings speak to our time
as we live out the external history of a visible Church while
internally drawing life from Jesus as branches on the vine. His
comments offer an opportunity to appreciate the intent of the
season after Easter and to prepare ourselves for the intensified
gift of the spirit at Pentecost.
In his other books for Advent, Christmas, and Lent published by
The Liturgical Press, Father Brown has made the rich insights of
modern biblical exegesis conveniently available for reflection
during the great feasts of the liturgical year. Here he does the
same for the Easter season by commenting on the Gospel stories of
the risen Christ.
Rather than focusing on the differences between the evangelists'
accounts of the resurrection, Father Brown instead concentrates on
how each treatment of the resurrection fits the theology and plan
of its Gospel. Those people who afford the Church's liturgical
calendar a major role in their spiritual life will appreciate the
added meaning Father Brown infuses into these stories that dwell at
the heart of our faith.
Father Brown reflects here not only on those annunciations of
Jesus' forthcoming birth in the Gospels of Matthew and Luke, but
also on the beautiful canticles, the Magnificat and the Benedictus,
and on the origins of Jesus as given in the first words of the New
Testament.
This best-selling book is certain to remain in the forefront of
Gospel exegesis for years to come. In it, Father Brown treats the
Gospels, written thirty to sixty years after the life of Christ, as
reflecting considerate theological and dramatic development and not
simply as literal accounts of a historical event.
In this digest of his longer work, "The Birth of the Messiah, "
Father Brown puts the adult Christ back into Christmas, treating
the infancy narratives of Matthew and Luke as the entire Gospel
story in miniature.
Father Brown has thoroughly revised, updated, and adjusted the
commentary to the 1986 revised NAB translation of the Bible, making
this edition of his best-selling book virtually a new work.
In the first volume of Raymond E. Brown's magisterial three-volume
commentary on the Gospel According to John, all of the major
Johannine questions--of authorship, composition, dating, the
relationship of John to the Synoptics (Mark, Matthew, and
Luke)--are discussed. The important theories of modern biblical
scholarship concerning John are weighed against the evidence given
in the text and against prevailing biblical research. In sum, what
is attempted is a synthesis of the major scholarly insights that
bear on the Fourth Gospel.
The translation--as Father Brown states at the outset--strives not
for any formal beauty but rather for an accurate and contemporary
version: "the simple, everyday Greek of the Gospel has been
rendered into the ordinary American English of today." The result
is a translation that will strike the reader with uncommon
immediacy.
Father Brown also analyzes, in the appendixes, the meaning, use,
and frequency of certain key words and phrases that occur in John,
and examines the differences between the Johannine and Synoptic
treatments of the miracle stories.
The chapters of the Gospel translated here in Volume 29 (1-12)
comprise the Prologue, which opens with the famous "In the
beginning was the Word," and the Book of Signs, an account of the
miracles of Jesus and of his ministry.
The truth behind the Gospel accounts of the Nativity, updated to
include the latest research--a classic by a renowned scholar,
hailed as "masterly" and "definitive" in the original edition.
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