Christian Origins and the Question of God

Tue, 16/09/2003 - 18:37

I have set out here a summary of NT Wright’s exhaustive multi-volume project Christian Origins and the Question of God. The works published so far in the series are:

  1. The New Testament and the People of God
  2. Jesus and the Victory of God
  3. The Resurrection of the Son of God

A complete pdf version of the summary can be downloaded from here. To save the file right click on the link and select ‘save target as’ or ‘save link as’.

You can also generate a printable version of all pages below the page being viewed by clicking on the ‘printer-friendly’ link.

This material was originally published on Open Source Theology.

Comments

How great is this?!?! My husband is reading through all these right now but I just don’t have the time to do the same. This is SO useful for me - now I can be a better discussion partner for all the things he is learning from these amazing, and definitely EXHUASTIVE (exhuasting?) books. Printing PDF right now!

Just finished - thanks again for this! Now to read it again…

What has always impressed me most about N.T. Wright is the combination of his excellent scholarship and inspiring faith. I have appreciated his work and his perspective and I look forward to more from him in the future. His retirement was probably a bit disappointing to his parish but I know his influence will continue to grow and benefit the lives of Christians around the world. I wish him all the best and God’s blessings.

________

Paul, part of Traduceri team

At random...

The coming of a ‘new world order’: why Jesus wasn’t wrong I had set out to respond rather briefly to some remarks made by paulf in a comment on my “The kingdom of God: not ‘now and not yet’” post, but in the excitement that response has swollen to the proportions of a whole new post. Paulf stated...
Hell, The unbiblical doctrine of I set out a while back to write a general piece on the unbiblical doctrine of “hell” as part of a glossary or lexicon of key concepts but got side-tracked. Since then the brouhaha over Rob Bell’s book has prompted extensive reflection on...
History and theology: never the twain shall meet Murray Rae’s History and Hermeneutics is “an enquiry into how theology and history may be thought together”. This is an overriding concern of contemporary hermeneutics, and the book is an excellent contribution to the debate. But how you...