Introducing the New Testament

Bibliographic Information

Introducing the New Testament

Henry Wansbrough

Bloomsbury T & T Clark, 2015

  • : hb

Available at  / 1 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Introducing the New Testament presents the complex and often challenging texts and history of the New Testament in a clear and informative manner. The book begins with a section that gives readers a clear idea of how to use it most effectively for study and personal research, followed by a chapter which outlines the various manuscript traditions and processes of transmission that resulted in the biblical texts we have before us today. With this groundwork complete, readers are then introduced to all the texts of the New Testament, and to major issues and debates such as the 'Historical Jesus' the 'Synoptic Problem' and current debates surrounding inspiration - how these texts can be seen in both a historical context and in the context of religious faith. The book features maps, chapter summaries, sample essay questions, chapter bibliographies and reading lists, and an annotated glossary of key terms.

Table of Contents

Preface How to use this book Introduction 1. A Brief History of Israel 2. How the text came to be: originals and translations 3. The New Testament World: Judea, Galilee, Romans, Hellenism 4. Mark 5. Matthew 6. Luke 7. Acts 8. The Synoptic Problem 9. John 10. The Historical Jesus 11. Pauline Letters (more than one chapter - exact divisions TBD) 12. Pastoral Letters 13. The Letters of John 14. Revelation 15. Inspiration: how these texts are seen to be normative Bibliography Indexes

by "Nielsen BookData"

Details

Page Top