Fracture : the cross as irreconcilable in the language and thought of the biblical writers /

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Harrisville, Roy A.
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Grand Rapids, Mich. : William B. Eerdmans Pub. Co., [2006]
Subjects:
Online Access:Table of contents
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction
  • Textbook history without breaks
  • Where revolutions begin
  • Polarization
  • "Jews demand signs"
  • "Greeks desire wisdom"
  • "Conversion" or "call"
  • Paul
  • The evangelists
  • The fathers
  • A new world
  • The convert
  • Continuity and contrast
  • The death of Jesus in Paul
  • The Old Testament cultic and legal tradition
  • Use and fracture of wisdom, sacrifice, and the law
  • Use and fracture of apocalyptic
  • Use and fracture of stoicism
  • Use and fracture of gnosis
  • Use and fracture of the pre-pauline Christian tradition
  • The pauline experiential theology
  • Paul and the cross in the believer's life
  • The death of Jesus in Mark
  • The scheme
  • Old Testament theology
  • Use and fracture of the servant motif
  • Use and fracture of apocalyptic
  • Use and fracture of the divine man
  • Use and fracture of the pre-marcan tradition
  • The death of Jesus in Matthew
  • The scheme
  • Use and fracture of Old Testament theology and apocalyptic
  • Use and fracture of nomism
  • The death of Jesus in Luke
  • Luke and the heilsgeschichtlich scheme
  • A second reading
  • Use : martyrs and wisdom
  • Fracture : the divine necessity
  • Synoptic confession of the crucified
  • The death of Jesus in John
  • The debate
  • The scheme
  • Use and fracture of Judaism
  • Use and fracture of gnosis
  • The death of Jesus in Hebrews
  • The death of Jesus
  • Hebrews and Judaism
  • Use and fracture of the cultic
  • Use and fracture of apocalyptic
  • Use and fracture of hellenistic Bible exegesis
  • Use and fracture of gnosis
  • The death of Jesus in the First Epistle of Peter
  • The independence of the Epistle
  • Use and fracture of the Old Testament and Judaism
  • Hellenization and its fracture
  • Gnosis and its fracture
  • Christian sources and their fracture.