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I. Howard Marshall

    Ian Howard Marshall était un exégète écossais du Nouveau Testament dont l'œuvre s'est profondément plongée dans l'exégèse biblique. Sa carrière universitaire a inclus un poste de professeur à l'Université d'Aberdeen, où il s'est concentré sur l'interprétation détaillée des textes du Nouveau Testament. Marshall s'est identifié à la tradition évangélique méthodiste, et son bilan de publications fut considérable. Ses études du Nouveau Testament sont appréciées pour leur profondeur et leur précision dans la recherche théologique.

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    New Testament Interpretation
    Luke
    The Acts of the Apostles : an Introduction and Commentary
    Exploring the New Testament
    • Exploring the New Testament

      A Guide to the Letters and Revelation Volume 2

      • 416pages
      • 15 heures de lecture
      4,0(4)Évaluer

      Designed for students and educators, this third edition of the Exploring the Bible series offers a comprehensive introduction to the Letters and Revelation. Authored by experienced scholars, it includes classroom-friendly features that facilitate independent Scripture study. The volume aims to make biblical texts accessible, enriching the understanding of key themes and messages within the New Testament.

      Exploring the New Testament
    • Luke

      Historian and Theologian

      • 238pages
      • 9 heures de lecture

      Apart from the apostle Paul, Luke is arguably the most influential force in the canon of the New Testament. His Gospel and Acts occupy almost a third of the New Testament, and together their narrative voice carries us over a span of more than sixty years, from the birth of Jesus to the imprisonment of Paul in Rome. It is difficult to imagine our understanding of the New Testament period without Luke's writings. For this reason, the question of Luke's historical reliability has been repeatedly investigated. In this study Howard Marshall affirms Luke's trustworthiness as a historian. But Luke is more than a historian. He is also a theologian who finds his interpretive key in the great theme of salvation. Marshall provides us with a lucid guide to Luke's theology of salvation as it is unfurled in Gospel narrative, but always with a eye on its ongoing development in the companion work, the Acts of the Apostles. A postscript assesses the course of Lukan studies during the decade of 1979-1988.

      Luke