New Testament Theology

Front Cover
Clarendon Press, 1994 M06 3 - 518 pages
Generations of students have known G.B. Caird as a penetrating and lucid guide to the many questions and problems posed by modern biblical study. His brillant commentaries on St Luke, the Book of Revelation, and St Paul's Prison Epistles, as well as his other studies on theology and the Bible, have won for him a place among the twentieth century's foremost biblical scholars. This new and masterly presentation of New Testament theology, completed and edited since the author's death by Professor L.D. Hurst, takes the unique step of setting up an imaginary debate amongst the various authors of the New Testament themselves. As central concepts (predestination, sin, atonement, the church, sacrament, ethics, eschatology, and christology) are `discussed' between such figures as Luke, Paul, John, and the author of Hebrews, the work moves to its climax with a presentation of the theology of Jesus himself. The result provides a particularly fresh and illuminating picture of the ideas at the heart of Christianity, deserving a place on the shelf of every serious pastor, theologian, and student of the Bible.
 

Contents

THE APOSTOLIC CONFERENCE
1
2 THE DIVINE PLAN
27
3 THE NEED OF SALVATION
74
4 THE THREE TENSES OF SALVATION
118
5 THE FACT OF SALVATION
136
6 THE EXPERIENCE OF SALVATION
179
7 THE HOPE OF SALVATION
238
8 THE BRINGER OF SALVATION
279
JESUS AND THE APOSTOLIC CONFERENCE
409
DIALOGUE MEANING AND AUTHORITY
420
The Writings of George Bradford Caird
427
Bibliography
431
Index of Passages Cited
451
Index of Modern Authors
486
Index of Subjects
493
Copyright

9 THE THEOLOGY OF JESUS
345

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