Jesus Darkly: Remembering Jesus With the New Testament
Joel B Green, Rafael RodriguezPaperback 2018-05-01
Publisher Description
New Testament students have not always been well served by study of the historical Jesus, which tends to segregate Jesus from his significance vis-à-vis Israel's scriptures and God's agenda as this is developed among the New Testament writers in the living context of a faith community's memory. The witness of scripture does in fact help us remember Jesus well.
The Bible is one story, from beginning to end - a story of God putting God's family back together. Its plot develops in multiple, sometimes competing, ways. It exhibits the full range of human emotions and, perhaps surprisingly, it claims that these are also God's emotions. But on every page, we hear the call of a God whose family has chosen an early inheritance instead of an intimate relationship. That God - pictured as a parent, often a father - beckons God's children, inviting them to return and to sit at the table, clothed by mercy and affirmed as God's very family.
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Publisher Description
New Testament students have not always been well served by study of the historical Jesus, which tends to segregate Jesus from his significance vis-à-vis Israel's scriptures and God's agenda as this is developed among the New Testament writers in the living context of a faith community's memory. The witness of scripture does in fact help us remember Jesus well.
The Bible is one story, from beginning to end - a story of God putting God's family back together. Its plot develops in multiple, sometimes competing, ways. It exhibits the full range of human emotions and, perhaps surprisingly, it claims that these are also God's emotions. But on every page, we hear the call of a God whose family has chosen an early inheritance instead of an intimate relationship. That God - pictured as a parent, often a father - beckons God's children, inviting them to return and to sit at the table, clothed by mercy and affirmed as God's very family.