Logos already lists the workbook, but lacks the award winning title that is its base. Please add this work. Thanks!
An excerpt to give you a foretaste:
Jesus' gospel was that Israel's long story had reached its climax in him—that he had come to reunite heaven and earth and usher in the kingdom of God, a God-saturated society of peace and justice and love. Jesus' central message was that this in-breaking kingdom is available now, to all. That anyone, no matter who you are, where you come from, or what your station in life is, can enter this kingdom and be "blessed" (or "happy") with God. You can have this new kind of life if you will put your trust and confidence in Jesus for the whole of your life.
Is this how you understand the gospel?
In Jesus' gospel, the call to become an apprentice makes perfect sense. If the kingdom of God is "near" but is not a kingdom with borders and passports—in fact, it's been "hidden…from the wise and the learned"—the it makes sense that we'd need some serious training in how to access this extraordinary new society and enter the inner life of God that's been made available to us through Jesus. We'd need access to a new power to break off our old life habits (that belong to the kingdom of this world) and become who we were always meant to be: people of the new kingdom.
This work is very useful in the study of ancient and medieval Jewish beliefs about the coming of the Messiah in the future. Here is an AI produced summary: "Pirkei DeRabbi Eliezer (PRE) is an aggadic midrash traditionally attributed to Rabbi Eliezer ben Hyrcanus. The work blends biblical exegesis with homiletic expansions,…
Too often scholars impose on the past modern terms and theories. This is particularly evident concerning discussions of divine sovereignty and human responsibility, where libertarian and compatibilist notions of freedom obscure older understandings of concurrence. Providence, Freedom, and the Will is one historian’s…
Hi is there any chance that you can add the Easy English bible version to the ones on sale. I would love to purchase it at it is a good translation to show people a simplified version of things.
Subtitle: Pistis and Fides in the Early Roman Empire and Early Churches. A book-length treatment of what the words pistis (Greek) and fides (Latin) meant in Paul's time. Morgan is a classicist, formerly at Oxford and now at Yale.