One of the major Christological works of the 20th century. I honestly thought this was already available in Logos.
Surprised there hasn't been any response to this suggestion, so I'm going to push a little harder. Assuming Mark was produced first (not sure if that's true or even matters; I always assumed each gospel was independantly inspired by YHWH), then Mark's "take" has a sort of gatekeeper effect in terms of achieving anything like an adequate understanding of Yeishuua`, ':Elohhiym, and Scripture. I see 3 traits that I combine under the "Messianic Secret" rubric: 1) Yeishuua`'s repeated admonition to his disciples and the individuals with whom He engaged to not spread His identity as Messianic miracle-worker; 2) Mark's repeated use of the word "immediately" to describe Yeishuua`'s movement through the narrative space; 3) Mark's droning insistence that the disciples were denser than dolomite, and fundamentally incapable (at that time—and in general principle) of understanding much of anything that Yeishuua` was saying or doing, which is/was a prophesied necessity of YHWH's plan…that is still in effect today. All of this stuff is "in there" (i.e. Mark), and it has been addressed by numerous scholars since, but Wrede was the first to comprehensively address this intuitive oddity. For all their disconnection, the rabbis have acknowledged something I have found to be true with regularity over the years, which is that wherever Scripture produces "difficult", "unexpected", or counter-intuitive data, that's where the juice is. Logos needs to include this resource, because, to amend Woody Allen, "we need the juice."
Agree, should be in Logos.
I went ahead with https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B005BFF3V0/
since 99 cents is hard to pass up! I have in Logos but like marking up on my Scribe.
What about having the German original in Logos/Verbum?
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Outstanding book for evangelism & discipleship.
I would like to suggest the inclusion of A Rabbi Talks with Jesus by Jacob Neusner in the Logos catalog. This book is a highly influential work in Jewish-Christian dialogue. In it, Neusner presents a respectful and rigorous engagement with the figure of Jesus by placing himself within the context of the Gospel of Matthew…
The audio book is available in Logos but the readable book isn't.
I would love to have some books by Robert Alter in my Logos Library.
Probably the most immportant work on the history of justification, now in its 4th printing, is Alister McGrath's Iustitia Dei. It really needs to be offered by Logos.