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"Christians may not have shared the details of the particular
situation of the Roman followers of Jesus, but they have shared for
centuries the concern about what faith means for life, and they
have turned to Paul to understand what it means to be faithful to
our faithful God." -from the introduction For centuries, the
apostle Paul's reflections in the book of Romans have shaped
Christian thinking about the gospel of Jesus Christ and how we can
be faithful to the gospel. Key theologians including Augustine,
Luther, Wesley, and Barth have wrestled with Romans and listened to
it, understanding it in relation to questions of their own times.
In her theological commentary, Sarah Heaner Lancaster helps us hear
Romans anew for today. She considers major elements such as the old
and new perspectives on Paul, justification, the relation of Jews
and Christians, Empire, and disagreements in the church. Lancaster
helps us recognize the importance of the letter during the time it
was written, as well as its ongoing meanings now. Paul's insights
go beyond the pragmatic to the theological, which gives Romans its
enduring significance and ongoing value. Lancaster's excellent
commentary helps us for preaching, teaching, and worship to hear
Paul's message afresh and to be strengthened and challenged in our
Christian faith.
People want to be happy. Nothing could be more obvious, and yet
this common and evident goal is not as easy to achieve as it is to
desire. The Christian tradition has understood happiness to be
gained through relationship with God, and it has much to say about
what will make us truly happy and what will not. This book examines
happiness from a Christian perspective, using John Wesley as the
focus of study because he understood happiness with God to be the
very goal of Christian life. He also understood that Christian
happiness needed to acknowledge the difficulties of life. This book
seeks to learn from the wisdom of the past in order to imagine how
Christians today might talk about happiness in a way that is
faithful to the tradition and engages the world as well.
The theological impact of accepting the absolute authority of
biblical scripture is enormous especially for women who attend and
serve churches. But until now, few books have been willing to
address this issue head on. Sarah Lancaster looks at the way women
in the church have dealt with the question of scriptural authority
and how they can address it in the future. Some women, she says,
accept the authority of the Bible without question and stay in
church without change of attitude or action. Others deny that the
Bible has any authority, completely leaving Christianity in the
belief that the Bible and Christian tradition are irredeemably
patriarchal. Still others recognize that while scripture is largely
patriarchal, it is authoritative for their life of faith. The Bible
possesses a narrative coherence, its story resonating in our own
lives. For women, the Bible can continue to ring true to their
experience, letting them acknowledge scripture's authority in spite
of its problems. The Bible is not about patriarchy; it is about how
God is present to us and interacts with us in order to bring us to
fullness of life. Lancaster says that women can criticize those
things in scripture that help maintain a patriarchal world without
invalidating scripture's authority. Scripture, she argues, informs,
forms, and transforms. With its combination of narrative and
feminist theology, Women and the Authority of Scripture brings a
powerful new perspective to the doctrine of biblical authority in
the contemporary world. Sarah Heaner Lancaster is Associate
Professor of Theology, Methodist Theological School in Delaware,
Ohio. She is an ordained elder in the North Texas Conference of the
United Methodist Church. She lives in Westerville, Ohio.
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