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Marianne Thompson

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  • 1-3 John

    $25.99

    This series expounds the biblical text for the contemporary church.

    Marianne Meye Thompson provides an introductory discussion and passage-by-passage commentary of 1-3 John. With the help of the scholarly background material, Thompson allows the text to speak to a contemporary church still caught in controversy. Now in paper.

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  • Colossians And Philemon

    $29.99

    Seeking to bridge the chasm between academic biblical studies and systematic theology, this new series offers section-by-section exegesis in conversation with theological concerns.

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  • God Of The Gospel Of John

    $32.99

    247 Pages

    Additional Info
    Some scholars approaching John’s Gospel emphasize the “signs,” the “I” discourses of Jesus, or the method of organization that is so different from the other Synoptics. Thompson, however, makes a full-scale investigation of John’s view of God compared to other Scripture.

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  • Promise Of The Father

    $38.00

    1. Joachim Jeremias And The Debate About Abba
    2. God As Father In The Old Testament And Second Temple Judaism
    3. Jesus And The Father
    4. Jesus And The Father In The Synoptic Gospels
    5. “Heirs Of God, Heirs With Christ”
    6. “The Living Father”

    Additional Info
    What does it mean to confess that God is “The Father of our Lord Jesus Chrst”? The Promise of the Father begins by showing that Judaism’s claim of God as “Father” never attached an ontological gender or “masculine” essence to God. Instead of setting the standard for the conduct for human personal fathers or men in general as some argue, God’s identity as “Father” served as an example for the entire community of faith as one who promotes mercy, justice, and humility. Jesus’ address to God as “Father” thus did not introduce a new private experience of intimacy with the divine, rather, it evoked Israel’s ancient and corporate hope of God’s saving power and covenant faithfulness. Above all then, to speak of God as “Father” signifies the redemptive and life-giving work of God and then only subsequently to human experience of that work. Christians can confess God as “Father of Jesus Christ” because God was first “Father” to the people of Israel and to Israel’s Messiah, Jesus of Nazareth and to the followers of Jesus.

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