Showing posts with label NT Theology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NT Theology. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

2 New Academic Titles Worth Mentioning

There are at least two new academics worth your notice.  I have previewed the sample pages only, so I do not have much to say other than I have learned much from each of these others through some of their other works.

1) G. K. Beale. A New Testament Biblical Theology: The Unfolding of the Old Testament in the New. Baker Academic, 2011. Hardcover, 1072 pages.

G. K. Beale (PhD, University of Cambridge) is professor of New Testament and biblical theology at Westminster Theological Seminary in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He is the coeditor of the Commentary on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament and the author of seven books, including commentaries on Revelation and 1 and 2 Thessalonians.


Endorsements 
ExcerptCover - 87 (PDF) // vii-ix, 88-116 (PDF)
Purchase  

From the book: [t]his biblical theology of the NT first attempts to trace the canonical storyline of the OT and tries to distill the major biblical-theological themes from that storyline (chap. 2). Since, as we will see, “movement toward an eschatological goal” is one of the major themes of the OT storyline, the third, fourth, and fifth chapters look respectively at the eschatology of the OT, then of Judaism, and finally of the NT. The themes composing the OT storyline found in chapters 2–3 become the basis for the NT storyline, which is stated in chapter 6. The NT plotline is a transformation of the OT storyline through developing it and fulfilling its prophetic features. 
Chapter 6 then discusses methodological problems in the search for “centers” in the OT and the NT and how this is similar yet different from the search for a storyline, the latter of which the present project prefers. What is meant by the word “storyline” is explained further in chapter 2 (under the heading “The Repeated Cosmic Judgment and New Creation Episodes of the Old Testament”) and especially in chapter 6. It is argued that a storyline reflects a unified story yet contains multiple themes that are incased in a narratival canonical plotline. 
Then the components of the NT storyline, as noted earlier, serve as the organizing outline of the remainder of the book (chaps. 7–28). Each chapter discusses and traces throughout the NT a thematic component of the storyline (along with subthemes to be traced that are subordinate to each major thematic component). This NT section is the bulk of the book. Each theme discussed in the NT section is seen from the perspective of its roots in the OT, its development in Judaism, and through the lens of the “already and not yet end-time fulfillment” in the NT. Accordingly, chapters typically are structured, to one degree or another, by discussion of relevant OT background, then Jewish developments, followed by analysis of the NT material (sometimes but not always in the order of Gospels, Acts, Paul, General Epistles, and Revelation). In some cases, when the relevant material is concentrated in only certain parts of the NT, there is more focus on those parts than others, as alluded to earlier. 
The OT storyline that I posit as the basis for the NT storyline is this: The Old Testament is the story of God, who progressively reestablishes his new-creational kingdom out of chaos over a sinful people by his word and Spirit through promise, covenant, and redemption, resulting in worldwide commission to the faithful to advance this kingdom and judgment (defeat or exile) for the unfaithful, unto his glory. The inductive basis for the formulation of this statement is found in chapters 2–3. 
The NT transformation of the storyline of the OT that I propose is this: Jesus’s life, trials, death for sinners, and especially resurrection by the Spirit have launched the fulfillment of the eschatological already–not yet new-creational reign, bestowed by grace through faith and resulting in worldwide commission to the faithful to advance this new-creational reign and resulting in judgment for the unbelieving, unto the triune God’s glory. At first glance, some of the conceptual categories that compose various chapters may not seem to grow out of the foregoing storyline components, but I will argue that they indeed do. 
I contend that the goal of the NT storyline is God’s glory, and that the main stepping-stone to that goal is Christ’s establishment of an eschatological new-creational kingdom and its expansion. The main focus of this book is on the development of this new-creational kingdom and its spread as the penultimate means to divine glory. Others have argued well that the glory of God is the final goal of Scripture, so I concentrate my efforts here on the major instrumentation that accomplishes that goal. (15-16)


2) Andreas Köstenberger and Richard Patterson. Invitation to Biblical Interpretation: Exploring the Hermeneutical Triad of History, Literature, and Theology. Kregel Academic, 2011. Hardcover or PDF, 880 pages.


Andreas J. Köstenberger is director of doctoral studies and professor of New Testament and Greek at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary in Wake Forest, North Carolina. He translated Adolf Schlatter’s two-volume theology of the New Testament into English and is editor of the Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society.  


Richard D. Patterson (PhD, University of California, Los Angeles) is distinguished professor emeritus at Liberty University.
Companion Item: Invitation to Bibblical Interpretation Presentation Slides 
ExcerptEndorsements - 94 (PDF)
Purchase  
From the book: This volume is based on such respect both for the ultimate author of Scripture and for its human authors. We are committed to taking the text of Scripture seriously and to practicing a hermeneutic of listening and perception. We aim to take into account the relevant historical setting of a given passage and to pay close attention to the words, sentences, and discourses of a particular book. We purpose to give careful consideration to the theology of the Bible itself and to interpret the parts in light of the canonical whole.  Last but not least, we seek to operate within the proper framework of the respective genres of Scripture. (58-59)

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Thursday, July 31, 2008

Schreiner's New Testament Theology Now Available in UK

A few days ago I received the copy of Schreiner's New Testament Theology (Baker Academic, 2008, USA) that I had purchased from the Westminster Bookstore. I hope to be able to start reading in it soon. Well, this morning, while browsing the Inter-Varsity Press (UK) site, I learned that they have published the UK edition and that it is now available for purchase (released 18/07/2008). Here's what their edition looks like, along with the table of contents:

New Testament Theology

Magnifying God in Christ

Thomas R Schreiner

£24.99
Hardback 976 pages
ISBN 9781844743094

In this comprehensive survey of key themes and emphases, Thomas Schreiner unfolds the riches of New Testament theology through the lens of salvation history, showing how fruitful the 'promise - fulfillment', 'already - not yet' paradigm is for understanding the New Testament.

Contents

Introduction

Part 1. The Fulfillment of God's Saving Purpose: The Already - Not Yet

1. The Kingom of God in the Synoptic Gospels
2. Eternal Life and Eschatology in John's Theology
3. Inaugurated Eschatology Outside the Gospels

Part 2. The God of the Promise: the Saving Work of the Father, Son, and Spirit

4. The Centrality of God in New Testament Theology
5. The Centrality of Christ in the Synoptic Gospels
6. The Messiah and the Son of Man in the Gospels
7. The Son of God, I Am, and Logos
8. Jesus' Saving Work in the Gospels
9. Jesus' Saving Work in Acts
10. The Christology of Paul
11. The Saving Work of God and Christ According to Paul
12. The Christology of Hebrews - Revelation
13. The Holy Spirit

Part 3. Experiencing the Promise: Believing and Obeying

14. The Problem of Sin
15. Faith and Obedience
16. The Law and Salvation History

Part 4. The People of the Promise and the Future of the Promise

17. The People of the Promise
18. The Social World of God's People
19. The Consummation of God's Promises

Epilogue
Appendix: Reflections on New Testament Theology
Bibliography


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Monday, June 16, 2008

Collin Hansen Interviews Thomas Schreiner | NT Theology

This volume has been available for a few weeks and has been receiving favorable reviews. Today, Christianity Today has published Collin Hansen's interview with Thomas Schreiner.
Tom Schreiner's New Testament Theology searches for Scripture's unifying themes.
_____________________
by Thomas R. Schreiner
ISBNs: 9780801026805 / 0801026806
Price: $44.99
Format: Hardcover | 976 pages
Publication date: May. 08 | Division: Baker Academic

Excerpt here.

WTS ($27.89) | CBD ($32.99) | Amazon ($29.69)

See also Andy Cheung's interview.
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Monday, March 24, 2008

Andy Cheung Interviews Tom Schreiner

I would like to thank our anonymous commenter for sharing the following link to a recent interview with Dr Thomas Schreiner regarding his forthcoming New Testament Theology.

Interview with Tom Schreiner

Monday, 24 March 2008

Last Week, Midlands Bible College and Divinity School Tutor Andy Cheung interviewed New Testament scholar Tom Schreiner (professor of New Testament interpretation at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary) on his forthcoming book, New Testament Theology: Magnifying God in Christ.(read the full interview here)
In this interview Schreiner explains his approach to writing this New Testament Theology, shares some of the challenges he faced along the way, reveals some of sources that influenced his understanding of NT Theology (Ladd, Wright and Piper to name a few), and recommends a few other titles that he found to be very helpful. My compliments to Andy Cheung for a job well-done conducting this interview.

by Thomas R. Schreiner
ISBNs: 9780801026805 / 0801026806
Price: $44.99
Format: Hardcover | 976 pages
Publication date: May. 08 | Division: Baker Academic

Excerpt here.

CBD ($32.99) | Amazon ($29.69)
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Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Forthcoming: New Testament Theology by Thomas R. Schreiner

Coming Soon!!!
NOW AVAILABLE!

by Thomas R. Schreiner
ISBNs: 9780801026805 / 0801026806
Price: $44.99
Format: Hardcover | 976 pages
Publication date: May. 08 | Division: Baker Academic

Excerpt here.

Purchase: WTS | CBD ($32.99) | Amazon ($29.69)
Thomas R. Schreiner is professor of New Testament interpretation at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary and the author of Romans in the Baker Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament.
HT: Mike Bird via Jim Hamilton
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Monday, November 19, 2007

Book Review—Promise Unfulfilled by Roland McCune

Reviewed by Andrew David Naselli.

McCune, Rolland D. Promise Unfulfilled: The Failed Strategy of Modern Evangelicalism. Greenville, S.C.: Ambassador International, 2004. Hardcover, xvii + 398 pp. $24.99.

Editor’s Note: This review was originally posted on Andy’s blog along with a rejoinder from Dr. Rolland McCune. Due to the length of this review, we are splitting it up and publishing it here according to its two major headings—Part One: A Summary and Part Two: An Analysis.

Purchase: Ambassador-Emerald | CBD | Amazon

Special Features: Footnotes, Selected Annotated Bibliography, Scriptural Index, and Topical Index

ISBNs: 1932307311 / 9781932307313

LCCN: BR1642 U5 M33

DCN: 230.04624

Subject: Modern Evangelicalism


Read Part One: A Summary (11/19/07) & Part Two: An Analysis (11/20/07)
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Tuesday, May 1, 2007

Book Review—Solving the Romans Debate

We've posted a review at SharperIron of Solving the Romans Debate by A. Andrew Das. (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2007). 324 pages. $24.00/Paperback.

To Purchase: Augsburg/Fortress, CBD, Amazon

Please have a look. Stewart did a fine job reviewing this.

"Overall, Das contributes a well-researched study into the argument surrounding the recipients of the Roman epistle. Solving the Romans Debate will benefit any seminary student who wants to gain a better understanding of the differing views surrounding the Roman audience."

[Update: 1/3/08] Review of Biblical Literature published a review of Das' Solving the Romans Debate which can be read here. This review was written by David J. Downs of Fuller Theological Seminary, Pasadena, California.

Downs' conclusion is also appreciative of Das' work but still unconvinced. Here's his conclusion:
Andrew Das’s Solving the Romans Debate challenges the consensus view that Romans was written to an audience consisting largely of Gentiles with the counterclaim that Romans was written to an audience consisting entirely of Gentiles. Will this noteworthy monograph succeed in shifting the prevailing paradigm? Perhaps not entirely, but only time will tell. Future participants in “the Romans debate,” however, will have Das to thank for this stimulating contribution to the conversation.
____________________
Two related books by Andrew Das:

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Thursday, March 22, 2007

Herman Nicolaas Ridderbos (1909-Thursday, March 8, 2007)

Bio: Herman Nicolaas Ridderbos was born on February 13, 1909 in the Netherlands. He was the son of Dr. Jan Ridderbos (1879-1960), an ordained minister, biblical commentator, and professor Old Testament. His brother, Nico Ridderbos, was a professor of Old Testament at the Free University (Amsterdam).

After completing his theological studies at the University of Kampen (1927-1931), Ridderbos entered the ministry as a Dutch reformed preacher in Eefde-Gorsel (1934) and Rotterdam-Charlois (1939,). On November 13, 1936, he completed his doctoral work under Dr. F.W. Grosheide.

On February 21, 1943, he became professor of New Testament Studies at the University of Kampen. He continued in this post for 34 years. In 1942, Ridderbos was appointed by the Dutch Reformed synod of Sneek (1939-1942) as the successor of prof. Sidney Greydanus. He remained in Kampen from 1943-1974 as professor of New Testament Studies, and after this as Professor Emeritus (1975-1978).

Obituaries: NTToday (Dutch)

Matthijs den Dulk has provided a helpful post here.

Phil Gons has assembled a synopsis of the theological writings of Herman Ridderbos, who went home to be with the Lord on Thursday, March 8, 2007. Phil writes...

The late Herman Nicolaas Ridderbos (1909–2007), who went to be with the Lord last Thursday, March 8, 2007, at the age of 98, was one of my favorite modern theologians and has had a profound impact on the way I read the New Testament... [click here for more]

Ridderbos is worth your time. I have a handful of his books and have used portions for various studies. I always look forward to pulling his books off of the shelf when my studies turn in the direction of The Gospel of John or studies on Paul.

Books in print by H. N. Ridderbos: @ Westminster Bookstore

Bibliography:
  1. The Epistle of Paul to the Churches of Galatia. NICNT. Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co, 1953. [Amazon]
  2. Paul and Jesus: Origin and General Character of Paul's Preaching of Christ. Philadelphia, PA: Presbyterian & Reformed, 1957. [WTS | Amazon]
  3. When the Time Had Fully Come: Studies in New Testament Theology. Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co, 1957. [WTS | Amazon]
  4. Matthew's Witness to Jesus Christ: the King and the kingdom. New York, NY: Association, 1958. [Amazon]
  5. Bultmann. Translated by David H. Freeman. Philadelphia, PA: Presbyterian & Reformed, 1960. [Amazon]
  6. The Coming of the Kingdom. Translated by H. de Jongste. Edited by Raymond O. Zorn. Philadelphia, PA: Presbyterian & Reformed, 1962. [WTS | Amazon]
  7. The Speeches of Peter in the Acts of the Apostles. London: Tyndale Press, 1962. [Amazon]
  8. Paul: An Outline of His Theology. Translated by John Richard De Witt. Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co, 1975; Reprint, 1977. [WTS | Amazon]
  9. Studies in Scripture and Its Authority. Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co, 1978. [Amazon]
  10. Matthew. Translated by Ray Togtman. Bible Student's Commentary. Grand Rapids, MI: Regency Reference Library, 1987. [Amazon]
  11. Redemptive History and the New Testament Scriptures. 2nd ed, revised. Phillipsburg, NJ: P&R Publishing, 1988. [WTS | Amazon]
  12. The Gospel According to John: A Theological Commentary. Translated by John Vriend. Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co, 1997. [WTS | Amazon]



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