Gospel According to Luke (Pillar New Testament Commentary Series)
James R EdwardsHardback 2015-06-01
In this lively, fluent commentary, James Edwards shows how Luke's vocabulary, historical background, special themes, and narrative purpose make his gospel unique. Edwards balances the axiom of Luke's Gentile focus by highlighting an overarching interest in the fulfilment of Jewish scripture. 859 pages, from Apollos.
Publisher Description
This new Pillar commentary devotes attention throughout to the vocabulary, historical background, special themes, and narrative purpose that make the book of Luke unique among the four Gospels. Though the Gentile focus of Luke is often held to be primary, James Edwards counterbalances that by citing numerous evidences of Luke's overarching interest in depicting Jesus as the fulfillment of the providential work of God in the history of Israel, and he considers the possibility that Luke himself was a Jew. Edwards also draws out other important thematic issues in excursuses scattered throughout the commentary, including discussion of Luke's infancy narrative, the mission of Jesus as the way of salvation, and Luke's depiction of the universal scope of the gospel. This readable, relevant commentary attends to the linguistic, historical, literary, and theological elements of Luke that are essential to its meaning and considers Luke's significance for the church and the life of faith today.
$79.99
$79.99
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In this lively, fluent commentary, James Edwards shows how Luke's vocabulary, historical background, special themes, and narrative purpose make his gospel unique. Edwards balances the axiom of Luke's Gentile focus by highlighting an overarching interest in the fulfilment of Jewish scripture. 859 pages, from Apollos.
Publisher Description
This new Pillar commentary devotes attention throughout to the vocabulary, historical background, special themes, and narrative purpose that make the book of Luke unique among the four Gospels. Though the Gentile focus of Luke is often held to be primary, James Edwards counterbalances that by citing numerous evidences of Luke's overarching interest in depicting Jesus as the fulfillment of the providential work of God in the history of Israel, and he considers the possibility that Luke himself was a Jew. Edwards also draws out other important thematic issues in excursuses scattered throughout the commentary, including discussion of Luke's infancy narrative, the mission of Jesus as the way of salvation, and Luke's depiction of the universal scope of the gospel. This readable, relevant commentary attends to the linguistic, historical, literary, and theological elements of Luke that are essential to its meaning and considers Luke's significance for the church and the life of faith today.