Theology of the New Testament

Front Cover
Walter de Gruyter, 2000 - Bibles - 758 pages

Contents are the theological conceptions of the authors of the New Testament, considered from systematic viewpoints, in the following sequence: Paul, the synoptics (Jesus, the saying-source), the Johannine literature (including the Apocalypse of John), the deutero-Pauline writings, the catholic epistles.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
A Redemption and LiberationThe Theology of Paul
9
HistoryofReligion Presuppositions Prepauline Elements
19
c Prepauline Christian Traditions
64
The Person of Jesus Christ
78
b Jesus and Paul
95
The Liberation through Christ
116
d Faith
174
The Midst of TimeThe Evangelist Luke
392
b The Time of Jesus Christology
402
Truth and LoveThe Johannine School
419
The First Letter of John
434
The Gospel of John
455
c The Revelation
488
The Coming of the LambThe Apocalyptist John
515
E On the Way to the Early Catholic Churchthe
547

b Church and World
194
The Future of the Free
209
B Early Christian Tradition to
217
c John and Jesus
226
d The Possibility and Theological Importance
249
The Palestinian and the Hellenistic Church
263
b The Palestinian Church
275
Directives of the Son of ManThe Sayings Collection
310
The Way of Jesus ChristThe Synoptic Gospels
319
b The Problem of the Delay of the Parousia
327
Secret EpiphanyThe Evangelist Mark
343
Attaining the Maturity of Christ
565
c Eschatology
575
c Ecclesiology
586
Against the False Eschatological TeachersSecond
594
c The Apostolic Norm
601
Suffering with ChristThe First Letter of Peter
620
Orientation to the BeginningsThe Letter of Jude
641
c An Apology for Early Christian Eschatology
648
The Perfect Law of FreedomThe Letter of James
654
General Bibliography
683
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