The crucifixion of Jesus : history, myth, faith / Gerard S. Sloyan
Material type:
- 0800628861
- 9780800628864
- 0800629302
- 9780800629304
- ARCH YNDC 232.963 S634C 20
- BT453 .S635 1995
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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SAIACS Archives Room | Yandell Collection | ARCH YNDC 232.963 S634C (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not for loan | 066466 |
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ARCH YNDC 232.96 W947D The day the revolution began : reconsidering the meaning of Jesus's crucifixion / | ARCH YNDC 232.962 B783L The last days of Jesus / | ARCH YNDC 232.963 H511C Crucifixion in the ancient world and the folly of the message of the Cross / | ARCH YNDC 232.963 S634C The crucifixion of Jesus : history, myth, faith / | ARCH YNDC 232.97 B337J Jesus and the God of Israel : God Crucified and other studies on the New Testament's Christology of divine identity / | ARCH YNDC 232.97 F246A Ascension and ecclesia : on the significance of the doctrine of the Ascension for ecclesiology and Christian cosmology / | ARCH YNDC 232.97 H114D Did Jesus rise from the dead? : the resurrection debate / |
Includes bibliographical references and indexes
Crucifixion and why Jesus was sentenced to it -- How Jesus' death came to be seen as sacrificial and redemptive -- Patristic attribution of Jesus' death to the Jews -- Theories of expiation and satisfaction: from Tertullian to Anselm and beyond -- The popular passion piety of the Catholic west -- Modern soteriological thinking: cross, creation, and universal redemption -- Piety centered on Jesus' sufferings -- A variety of responses to a crucified redeemer
What was crucifixion? Why was Jesus of Nazareth executed and what really happened? Gerard Sloyan begins with history and traces the development of the New Testament accounts of Jesus' death. He shows how Jesus' death came to be seen as sacrificial and how the evolving understandings of Jesus' death affected those who suffered most from it - the Jews. He then traces the emergence and development - in theology, liturgy, literature, art - of the conviction that Jesus' death was redemptive, as seen both in soteriological theory from Tertullian to Anselm, in the Reformation and modern eras, and in more popular religious responses to the crucifixion. Especially fascinating is the story of the emergence of a distinct "Passion piety" that still characterizes the West. In all this Sloyan detects the separation of the cross from Jesus' life and resurrection, allowing the mythicizing of an event too large for mere words to handle: the mystery of the cross
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