Pauline Theology Volume 4: Looking Back Pressing on
Elizabeth Johnson (Ed)Paperback 1997-10-01
This final volume in the Pauline Theology series contains three groups of essays by members of the Pauline Theology Group of the Society of Biblical Literature, which met yearly between 1986 and 1996 to investigate the nature of Paul's theology. * The first set of essays considers the Group's two-year discussion of the Epistle to the Romans. * The second set presents the continuing debate about whether Paul speaks of "the faith(fulness) of Jesus Christ" or "faith in Jesus Christ." * The third section of the book offers two very different retrospectives on the entire ten-year endeavor to define and describe Pauline theology.
Each scholar's proposal is presented alongside another scholar's critical response to it so that the entire volume reflects the dialogical character of the Group's work. An epilogue to the volume suggests ways the foregoing debates can inform the search for theology in the New Testament letters of disputed Pauline authorship. (contributors: Paul J. Achtemeier, Leander E. Keck, Richard B. Hays, James D. G. Dunn, Victor Paul Furnish and et al).?
-Editorial Review.
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This final volume in the Pauline Theology series contains three groups of essays by members of the Pauline Theology Group of the Society of Biblical Literature, which met yearly between 1986 and 1996 to investigate the nature of Paul's theology. * The first set of essays considers the Group's two-year discussion of the Epistle to the Romans. * The second set presents the continuing debate about whether Paul speaks of "the faith(fulness) of Jesus Christ" or "faith in Jesus Christ." * The third section of the book offers two very different retrospectives on the entire ten-year endeavor to define and describe Pauline theology.
Each scholar's proposal is presented alongside another scholar's critical response to it so that the entire volume reflects the dialogical character of the Group's work. An epilogue to the volume suggests ways the foregoing debates can inform the search for theology in the New Testament letters of disputed Pauline authorship. (contributors: Paul J. Achtemeier, Leander E. Keck, Richard B. Hays, James D. G. Dunn, Victor Paul Furnish and et al).?
-Editorial Review.