Fracture

EERDMANS TRADEISBN: 9780802833082

The Cross as Irreconcilable in the Language and Thought of the BiblicalWriters

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By Roy A. Harrisville
Imprint: EERDMANS TRADE
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
222 x 146 mm
Weight:
430 g
Pages:
298

Description

Roy A Harrisville is Professor Emeritus of New Testament at Luther Seminary, Minnesota, USA.

Reviews

Theological Book Review "This kind of biblical theology has become unfashionable in some scholarly circles, but still has much to teach the church. . . It is perhaps the only American book for thirty years to refer far more to European (German) scholars than to fellow-Americans and as such is a useful compendium of continental exegetical opinions." J. Louis Martyn -- Union Theological Seminary, New York "A bold and unabashedly theological essay on the interpretation of the cross of Christ by Paul, the three Synoptists, John, Hebrews, and 1 Peter, this work from a veteran New Testament scholar provides a high-protein diet for student and pastor alike. Roy Harrisville has a keen sense of the theological jugular of these ancient texts, thus focusing our attention on the multiple ways in which the event of the cross shattered and creatively remade the theological cosmos of early Christians. No aspect of the New Testament is of greater import." Craig R. Koester -- author of Revelation and the End of All Things "The crucifixion of Jesus remains a powerful and disputed element in Christian faith and thought. Entering into the theological fray, Roy Harrisville shows how the cross disturbs earlier traditions and reshapes the way the New Testament writers think of God, the world, and the human condition. Combining passion for the subject with breadth of scholarship, Harrisville offers a compelling way to interpret the message of the cross in today's world." Leander E. Keck -- Yale Divinity School "Harrisville contends that in the New Testament, Jesus' cross is an event that ruptures and reconfigures worldviews, and so this book confronts interpretations that reduce the meaning of the cross to a fated tragedy, an admirable martyrdom, or an illustration of a principle -- all of which leave one's world intact. Attentive readers will be challenged by this provocative book."

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