Jesus, Paul and Judaism : an introduction to New Testament theology / Leonhard Goppelt.

By: Material type: TextTextLanguage: engger Publication details: London : New York, T. Nelson. [c1964]Edition: English ed., translated and edited by Edward SchroederDescription: 192 p. 21 cmSubject(s): DDC classification:
  • 296
LOC classification:
  • BM 535 .G583 1964
Contents:
Contents:
Concerning problem and method -- Judaism at the time of Jesus -- Jesus as God's final ambassador for all Israel -- Jesus' controversy with Pharisaism -- The offense to Judaism : the hidden nature of Jesus' authority -- The decision in Jerusalem : Israel's rejection of the Christ -- Jesus' own pronouncement about Israel's place in redemptive history following its rejection of him -- The church moves out to the edges of Judaism -- The church inside and outside Judaism -- The church separated from Judaism -- Paul interprets the break : Judaism as a sample of pre-Christian existence (Romans 1-8) -- Paul interprets the break : part-Christian Israel and the gospel (Romans 9-11) -- Paul's conflict with Jewish gnosticism : the initial conflict with syncretism -- Conclusion : Outlook for subsequent development.
Item type: Books
Holdings
Current library Collection Call number Vol info Status Date due Barcode
Judith Thomas Library General Stacks BKS BM 535 .G583 1964 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) AUA000496 Available AUA000496

"This English translation represents the first half of ... Christentum und Judentum im ersten und zweiten Jahrhundert."

Bibliographical footnotes.

Contents:

Concerning problem and method --
Judaism at the time of Jesus --
Jesus as God's final ambassador for all Israel --
Jesus' controversy with Pharisaism --
The offense to Judaism : the hidden nature of Jesus' authority --
The decision in Jerusalem : Israel's rejection of the Christ --
Jesus' own pronouncement about Israel's place in redemptive history following its rejection of him --
The church moves out to the edges of Judaism --
The church inside and outside Judaism --
The church separated from Judaism --
Paul interprets the break : Judaism as a sample of pre-Christian existence (Romans 1-8) --
Paul interprets the break : part-Christian Israel and the gospel (Romans 9-11) --
Paul's conflict with Jewish gnosticism : the initial conflict with syncretism --
Conclusion : Outlook for subsequent development.