The Gospels and Christian Life in History and Practice
Richard Valantasis, Douglas K. Bleyle, Dennis C. Haugh
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2009-06-30 - 314 pages

The
Gospels And Christian Life reads the four canonical Gospels as
handbooks for religious formation through communal practices. The book
focuses on the communities that produced each gospel, the dynamic energy
each gospel displays for creating and sustaining community life, the
different interpretations of the person of Jesus, and the different
systems of organization and leadership each gospel promulgated. The
authors carefully describe the social context of each Gospel and
delineate the practices the texts prescribe. Each gospel has an
imaginative portal, an introductory chapter introducing the necessary
background for understanding the social, intellectual, and religious
setting for each gospel. Their reading of each Gospel builds on these
foundations to illustrate the nature and scope of the community's
practices. Their work starts from the assumption that the communities
did not look to the Gospels for biographical data on the life of Jesus
to offer the reader a powerful reading of each Gospel community, its
unique practices, and the way people were trained to become members of
it. This book is aimed at undergraduate and graduate teachers and
students, pastors, and the general audience eager for new ways to
understand the New Testament.
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