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Mark, Manuscripts, and Monotheism
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 305

Mark, Manuscripts, and Monotheism

With contributors hailing from several different countries, and including both senior and junior scholars, this volume contains essays penned in honor of Larry W. Hurtado. Engaging and focusing upon three major emphases in Hurtado's scholarship, the study divides into three parts. Part one features essays on the narrative of the Gospel of Mark as well as its place within early Christian book culture. Part two features essays on textual criticism of the New Testament and other aspects of early Christian manuscripts. Part three features essays on Christology and the place of Jesus in early Christian devotion. The result is not only a fitting tribute to one of the most influential New Testament scholars of present times, but also a welcome survey of current scholarship. -- Book Cover.

Lord Jesus Christ
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 782

Lord Jesus Christ

This outstanding book provides an in-depth historical study of the place of Jesus in the religious life, beliefs, and worship of Christians from the beginnings of the Christian movement down to the late second century. Lord Jesus Christ is a monumental work on earliest Christian devotion to Jesus, sure to replace Wilhelm Bousset s Kyrios Christos (1913) as the standard work on the subject. Larry Hurtado, widely respected for his previous contributions to the study of the New Testament and Christian origins, offers the best view to date of how the first Christians saw and reverenced Jesus as divine. In assembling this compelling picture, Hurtado draws on a wide body of ancient sources, from S...

God in New Testament Theology
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 272

God in New Testament Theology

Explores how New Testament conceptions of God contribute to a contemporary constructive theology

How on Earth Did Jesus Become a God?
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 254

How on Earth Did Jesus Become a God?

In How on Earth Did Jesus Become a God? Larry Hurtado investigates the intense devotion to Jesus that emerged with surprising speed after his death. Reverence for Jesus among early Christians, notes Hurtado, included both grand claims about Jesus' significance and a pattern of devotional practices that effectively treated him as divine. This book argues that whatever one makes of such devotion to Jesus, the subject deserves serious historical consideration. Mapping out the lively current debate about Jesus, Hurtado explains the evidence, issues, and positions at stake. He goes on to treat the opposition to -- and severe costs of -- worshiping Jesus, the history of incorporating such devotion into Jewish monotheism, and the role of religious experience in Christianity's development out of Judaism. The follow-up to Hurtado's award-winningLord Jesus Christ (2003), this book provides compelling answers to queries about the development of the church's belief in the divinity of Jesus.

Destroyer of the Gods
  • Language: en

Destroyer of the Gods

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2017
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Christianity helped destroy one world and create another.

Mark
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 756

Mark

This volume provides a comprehensive, accessible introduction to the Gospel of Mark, now widely considered the first recorded treatment of Jesus. Darrell Bock explains how this text, once the least-used gospel, came to be regarded as the starting point for understanding Jesus. Drawing together previous arguments and discussion in a constructive summary, he traces the significance of Mark and addresses key features such as its cultural and historical background, its narrative flow, and the role of Greek in supplying meaning. This commentary highlights the issues Mark's gospel raises and develops Mark's message surrounding Jesus' claims of kingdom authority and salvation, the call to disciples to follow him, and the preparation of those disciples to face suffering in light of their choice. Mark will be a valuable resource for students, teachers, and pastors alike.

Honoring the Son
  • Language: en

Honoring the Son

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2018
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  • Publisher: Snapshots

Before the New Testament or the creeds of the church were written, the devotional practices of the earliest Christians indicate that they worshipped Jesus alongside the Father. Larry W. Hurtado has been one of the leading scholars on early Christology for decades. In Honoring the Son: Jesus in Earliest Christian Devotional Practice, Hurtado helps readers understand early Christology by examining not just what early Christians believed or wrote about Jesus, but what their devotional practices tell us about the place of Jesus in early Christian worship. Drawing on his extensive knowledge of early Christian origins and scholarship on New Testament Christology, Hurtado examines the distinctivene...

Why on Earth Did Anyone Become a Christian in the First Three Centuries?
  • Language: en

Why on Earth Did Anyone Become a Christian in the First Three Centuries?

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2016
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  • Publisher: Unknown

The consequences of becoming a Christian in the early Christian movement is set apart from that move from any other religious affiliation. This book explores the growth of adherents to early Christianity; that all across this early period people became adherents of Christianity in the face of the costs and consequences of doing so.

One God, One Lord
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 289

One God, One Lord

Larry Hurtado's One God, One Lord has been described as 'one of the most important and provocative Christologies of all time' (Alan F. Segal). The book has taken its place among works on Jesus as one consistently cited, consistently read, and consistently examined in scholarly discourse. Hurtado examines the early cultic devotion to Jesus through a range of Jewish sources. Hurtado outlines an early 'high' Christological theology, showing how the Christ of faith emerges from monotheistic Judaism. The book has already found a home on the shelves of many in its two previous editions. In this new Cornerstones edition Hurtado provides a substantial epilogue of some twenty-thousand words, which brings this ground-breaking work to the fore once more, in a format accessible to scholars and students alike.

Destroyer of the Gods
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 290

Destroyer of the Gods

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2016
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

"Silly," "stupid," "irrational," "simple." "Wicked," "hateful," "obstinate," "anti-social." "Extravagant," "perverse." The Roman world rendered harsh judgments upon early Christianity--including branding Christianity "new." Novelty was no Roman religious virtue. Nevertheless, as Larry W. Hurtado shows in Destroyer of the gods, Christianity thrived despite its new and distinctive features and opposition to them. Unlike nearly all other religious groups, Christianity utterly rejected the traditional gods of the Roman world. Christianity also offered a new and different kind of religious identity, one not based on ethnicity. Christianity was distinctively a "bookish" religion, with the producti...