What shall we do? : eschatology and ethics in Luke-Acts / Joseph M. Lear. [print]
Material type: TextPublication details: Eugene, Oregon : Pickwick Publications, (c)2018.Description: x, 191 pages ; 23 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781532618208
- 9781498243575
- BS2589.L438.W438 2018
- BS2589
- COPYRIGHT NOT covered - Click this link to request copyright permission:
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Circulating Book (checkout times vary with patron status) | G. Allen Fleece Library CIRCULATING COLLECTION | BS2589.6.L438.W438 2018 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 31923001733399 |
Browsing G. Allen Fleece Library shelves, Shelving location: CIRCULATING COLLECTION Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
BS2589.6.H62M46 2004 Empowered for witness : the Spirit in Luke-Acts / | BS2589.6.H62M53 2004 The Spirit and suffering in Luke-Acts : implications for a Pentecostal pneumatology / | BS2589.6.H62W46 2004x Community-forming power : the socio-ethical role of the Spirit in Luke-Acts / | BS2589.6.L438.W438 2018 What shall we do? : eschatology and ethics in Luke-Acts / | BS2589.6.M25G37 1989 The demise of the Devil : magic and the demonic in Luke's writings / | BS2589.6.P67P587 1991 The prayer texts of Luke-Acts / | BS2589.6.R47A54 2006 "But God raised him from the dead" : the theology of Jesus' resurrection in Luke-Acts / |
Introduction -- John the Baptist and Jesus: opening proclamations -- Received and rejected in Luke: the way to Jerusalem -- Sharing in the last days: the Jerusalem church -- Received and rejected in Acts: hospitable Gentiles -- Conclusion.
Since the 1960s, biblical scholars have noted a relationship between eschatology and ethics in Luke-Acts, but to date there has been no substantive study of the relationship between these themes. What Shall We Do? offers such a study. Lear observes and develops a logic that Luke-Acts presents that begins with eschatological expectation and ends with a particular pattern of life, especially with regard to possessions. He makes the bold claim that Luke has not given up on eschatological expectation. The healing of the cripple (Acts 3), Cornelius's conversion (Acts 10), and the shipwreck narrative (Acts 27-28) are figurative studies of coming eschatological salvation. In this context, Lear demonstrates that the sharing of possessions becomes the means by which a new eschatological people is formed. At the beginning of Luke's Gospel, John the Baptist says the true children of Abraham will escape the coming judgment because they share their possessions. The logic of this claim is worked out throughout Luke's two volumes, culminating in barbarian Maltans becoming children of Abraham because they hospitably receive the Apostle Paul. ;
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