The origin of Christology / C.F.D. Moule.
Material type:
- 0521212901
- 9780521212908
- ARCH YNDC 232.09 M926O
- BT198 .M68
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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SAIACS Archives Room | Yandell Collection | ARCH YNDC 232.09 M926O (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not for loan | 063771 |
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ARCH YNDC 232.09 L856C Contours of Christology in the New Testament / | ARCH YNDC 232.09 M249F The future of Christology : essays in honor of Leander E. Keck / | ARCH YNDC 232.09 M367C Christology in conflict : the identity of a Saviour in Rahner and Barth / | ARCH YNDC 232.09 M926O The origin of Christology / | ARCH YNDC 232.09 N616F For us and for our salvation : the doctrine of Christ in the early church / | ARCH YNDC 232.09 S334J Jesus : an experiment in Christology / | ARCH YNDC 232.09 W823M The many faces of the Christ : the Christologies of the New Testament and beyond / |
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Four well-known descriptions of Jesus -- The corporate Christ -- Conceptions of Christ in writers other than Paul -- The scope of the death of Christ -- The fulfilment theme in the New Testament -- Retrospect -- Prospect : the 'ultimacy' of Christ -- Excursus : obeisance (proskunein).
This book is about the processes by which Christians of the first century came to understand Jesus as they did. Some writers represent these as 'evolutionary', as though a merely human teacher came to be thought of as a divine figure (a new species, so to speak). Professor Moule suggests that 'development' is a preferable analogy, implying not the evolution of a new species of figure, but the development of understanding of what was there in Jesus from the beginning. The author re-examines four familiar characterizations of Jesus as 'the Son of Man', 'the Son of God', 'Christ' and 'Lord'; then he considers the reflexion in the Pauline epistles of an experience of Jesus as more than individual. In his concluding chapter Professor Moule speculates, in dialogue with Dr Haddon Willmer, about the implications of his findings for Christian doctrine. The book, which earned for the author the Collins Biennial Religious Book Award in 1977, embodies his 1974 Moorhouse Lectures in Melbourne, Australia. It was first published in June 1977.
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