The Birth of the Trinity: Jesus, God, and Spirit in New Testament and Early Christian Interpretations of the Old Testament
Autor Matthew W. Batesen Limba Engleză Paperback – 14 sep 2016
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198779247
ISBN-10: 0198779240
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 156 x 233 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198779240
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 156 x 233 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
The Birth of the Trinity is a stunningly important book that defies easy categorization. Is it exegetical? Is it theological? Is it historical? The resounding answer to each of these questions: Yes, and much more! Setting aside widespread and long-held views about Christological development or adoptionism, or about Trinitarian theology as an intrusion into biblical faith from Hellenistic philosophy, Bates urges that early high Christology and Christian understanding of the Trinity itself were cultivated through dramatic reading of Israels Scriptures. For biblical and theological studies alike, this is a compelling game changer
This is a bold and ambitious book that cuts across disciplinary lines as typically perceived, and will certainly (and reasonably) generate debate on a number of the points argued in it. But Bates makes an important contribution in underscoring how early Christians perceived the voice and person of Jesus in their (Old Testament) scriptures, and in contending that this constituted an important mode of theological reflection along the route to the doctrine of the Trinity
In this fascinating new study Matthew W. Bates mines a stream of early Trinitarian thinking that has all too often been forgotten. Of particular importance is his attention to the continuities between the New Testament writers own ways of attending to the divine agents at which Israels Scriptures already hinted, and also to the modes of Trinitarian exegesis that remained central throughout the early Christian period
In this bold and erudite study, Matthew W. Bates argues that it was not least by reading the Scriptures (the Old Testament) theo-dramatically, or prosopologically, that Jesus and his followers came very early on to Trinitarian conclusions. Scholars and students will find here a new and exciting way of investigating Christian origins. A landmark book
It is not every day that one reads a book that makes a distinct contribution to our understanding of how the New Testament authors interpret the Old Testament, sheds significant light on the reading practices of the New Testament authors by means of the early church fathers, and uses those results to make a compelling argument for the origins of the doctrine of the Trinity. But this is exactly what Bates does in The Birth of the Trinity ... a stunning achievement.
Bates has now laid siege to the disciplinary boundary between historical criticism and constructive theology.
[Bates's] approach opens up beautiful, rich Trinitarian readings.
a fresh approach to Christian trinitarian interpretation...
On the dust jacket Joel Green calls this book a game changer, and it certainly is that.
Bates tackles an important question in an original way, bringing in relevant information from the Graeco-Roman context of the New Testament
This is a bold and ambitious book that cuts across disciplinary lines as typically perceived, and will certainly (and reasonably) generate debate on a number of the points argued in it. But Bates makes an important contribution in underscoring how early Christians perceived the voice and person of Jesus in their (Old Testament) scriptures, and in contending that this constituted an important mode of theological reflection along the route to the doctrine of the Trinity
In this fascinating new study Matthew W. Bates mines a stream of early Trinitarian thinking that has all too often been forgotten. Of particular importance is his attention to the continuities between the New Testament writers own ways of attending to the divine agents at which Israels Scriptures already hinted, and also to the modes of Trinitarian exegesis that remained central throughout the early Christian period
In this bold and erudite study, Matthew W. Bates argues that it was not least by reading the Scriptures (the Old Testament) theo-dramatically, or prosopologically, that Jesus and his followers came very early on to Trinitarian conclusions. Scholars and students will find here a new and exciting way of investigating Christian origins. A landmark book
It is not every day that one reads a book that makes a distinct contribution to our understanding of how the New Testament authors interpret the Old Testament, sheds significant light on the reading practices of the New Testament authors by means of the early church fathers, and uses those results to make a compelling argument for the origins of the doctrine of the Trinity. But this is exactly what Bates does in The Birth of the Trinity ... a stunning achievement.
Bates has now laid siege to the disciplinary boundary between historical criticism and constructive theology.
[Bates's] approach opens up beautiful, rich Trinitarian readings.
a fresh approach to Christian trinitarian interpretation...
On the dust jacket Joel Green calls this book a game changer, and it certainly is that.
Bates tackles an important question in an original way, bringing in relevant information from the Graeco-Roman context of the New Testament
Notă biografică
Matthew W. Bates is Assistant Professor of Theology at Quincy University in Quincy, Illinois