£38.83
Free UK Delivery
Available - Usually dispatched within 6 days
Available - Usually dispatched within 6 days
This work focuses on the church or group of Christian believers and its function as a character or character group within the narrative of Acts. Most scholarly considerations of th subject of the church within New Testament studies either address significant questions about the respective situations and contexts of groups of earliest Christians or examine textual materials regarding the church without due regard for the literary context of those materials. Within Lukan studies, such tendencies are obvious. However, few if any works deal specifically with the descriptions and function of the church as a character within the larger narrative context and plot of Acts. This study offers a fresh reading of Acts that keeps the church in its literary places within that narrative.
What this study uncovers are descriptions of the church or Christian believers with repetitive emphases on certain chaacteristics that are presented in the initial scenes of the narrative: the blessing and presence of God, the unanimity of the believers, the communal caring for one another, and the proclamation of the gospel. Within the narrative, however, the portrayal of the Jewish people stands in sharp contrast, so that opposition to God and divisive behavior are the typical Lukan descriptions of that group. The progression of the Acts narrative presents an evolving image of the church that eventually includes both Jewish and non-Jewish believers of the gospel, with growing opposition from the Jewish people and even from the Jewish believers in Jerusalem. This dynamic portrait of the church in the book of Acts contrasts three different views concerning what one might call "the people of God": the Jewish people as the historical people of God, Jewish believers as represented by the Jerusalem church, and the church including both Jewish and non-Jewish believers. Acts encourages its readers to define and identify the church or Christian community as the people who belong to God, rather than those whose identity as God's people was based on historical or religious categories and distinctions.
Author
Dr. Richard P. Thompson
Book Format
paperback
Publisher
Continuum
Published
January 2007
Weight
414g
Page Count
306
Dimensions
15.3 x 22.9 x 1.7 cm
ISBN
9780567026453
ISBN-10
0567026450
Eden Code
124610
Featured in
Over 14,000 churches and schools have upgraded to an Advance Account and we‘d love to welcome you into this free program. We know that church volunteers and school teachers often use their own money, then have claim it back on on an expense form. We can take all of that hassle away by invoicing your church or school directly and delivering your order straight away.
Opening an account is quick and easy, with most accounts being approved and setup within a few hours of filling in the form below (on weekdays, not weekends). As soon as we‘ve approved the application we‘ll send you an email to let you know that its done.
Upgrade to a FREE Eden Advance AccountFor you
Free delivery on orders over £10