How I Love Your Torah, O LORD!

How I Love Your Torah, O LORD!
Author: Daniel I. Block
Publisher: Wipf and Stock Publishers
Total Pages: 270
Release: 2011-09-01
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1725246546

Like the book of Romans in the New Testament, the book of Deuteronomy provides the most systematic and sustained presentation of theology in the Old Testament. And like the Gospel of John, it represents mature theological reflection on God's great acts of salvation, in this case associated with the exodus of Israel from Egypt. Unfortunately, for many Christians, Deuteronomy is a dead book, either because its contents are unknown or because its message is misunderstood. The essays in this collection arise from a larger project driven by a passion to recover for Christians the life-giving message of the Old Testament in general and the gospel according to Moses in particular. The "meditations" cover a wide range of topics, from explorations into the meaning of specific texts to considerations of the ethical and homiletical relevance of the book for Christians today.

The Decalogue Through the Centuries

The Decalogue Through the Centuries
Author: Jeffrey P. Greenman
Publisher: Westminster John Knox Press
Total Pages: 261
Release: 2012-01-01
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0664234909

An exploration of how the Ten Commandments have been understood throughout history.

Pentecostals and the Doctrine of the Trinity

Pentecostals and the Doctrine of the Trinity
Author: Marius Nel
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 404
Release: 2023-04-17
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1443878626

This book explores the complex ideas of the Trinity and God, placing particular emphasis on the Pentecostal Church. If Jesus and the Spirit are divine to the same extent as the God of Israel, what is their relationship with the Father? Traditionally, the Western Church responds that there are three persons in the one God. How did the early Church think about the Trinity? The Church assumed that Jesus died a gruesome death on the cross to atone for our sins. This implies that God required one part of the divine to die to appease another part of the divine. A further complication arises when we consider that Jesus taught believers to forgive – why, then, did God not forgive humans? This book challenges the reader to rethink and reconsider their conception of God and the Trinity, given that God falls outside our frame of reference and outside of our universe (which we can consider our final frame of reference).

The Middle English Metrical Paraphrase of the Old Testament

The Middle English Metrical Paraphrase of the Old Testament
Author: Michael Livingston
Publisher: Medieval Institute Publications
Total Pages: 714
Release: 2011-09-01
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 1580444512

Like the Bible upon which it is based, the metrical paraphrase is unlikely to be a text read cover-to-cover by the faint-hearted. The Paraphrase is, in several ways, a remarkable artifact of the Chaucerian period, one that can reveal a great deal about vernacular biblical literature in Middle English, about readership and lay understandings of the Bible, about the relationship between Christians and Jews in late medieval England, about the environment in which the Lollards and other reformers worked, about perceived roles of women in history and in society, and even about the composition of medieval drama. The Paraphrase-poet's proclamation that he intends to write stories "for sympyll men" (line 19) to understand the Scriptures and be engaged by them-"That men may lyghtly leyre / to tell and undertake yt" (lines 23-24)-thus combines the profit of sacred literature with the pleasure of the secular. This is Horace's utile et dulce ("both useful and pleasing") principle at its clearest, a singular example of the didacticism that characterizes so much of medieval literature, an aesthetic of pedagogic efficacy that is inseparably linked to the essential component of true pleasure in the text.