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The letters to the Colossians and to Philemon / Douglas J. Moo. [print]

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Pillar New Testament commentaryPublication details: Grand Rapids, Michigan : William B. Eerdmans Pub. Company, (c)2008.Description: xvi, 471 pages ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0802837271
  • 1844743411
  • 9780802837271
  • 9781844743414
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • BS2715.53.L488 2008
  • BS2715.53.M817.L488 2008
Online resources:
Available additional physical forms:
  • COPYRIGHT NOT covered - Click this link to request copyright permission:
Contents:
Introduction to Colossians To whom was Colossians written? : Colossae and the Colossians Who wrote the letter? : authorship When was the letter written? : date and place of writing Why was Colossians written? : the false teaching What is Colossians teaching? : the theology of the letter Christ Cosmology and the powers The church The Gospel Eschatology The Christian life Commentary on Colossians The letter opening : "just as you have received Christ Jesus as lord ..." (1:1; 2:5) ; Prescript (1:1-2) ; The powerful Gospel of God's son (1:3-23) ; The evidence of the Gospel's power among the Colossians (Thanksgiving and prayer) (1:3-14) ; The heart of the Gospel : the supremacy of Christ in creation and redemption (1:15-20) ; The hope held out in the Gospel (1:21-23) ; The mystery of Christ in Paul's ministry and Christian experience (1:24-2:5) ; The letter body : " ... continue to live your lives in Him" (2:6-4:6) ; The heart of the matter : remaining centered on Christ (2:6-7) ; The threat to christocentric living : warning about false teachers (2:8-23) ; Spiritual fullness in christ (2:8-15) ; The empty promise of the false teaching (2:16-23) ; Living a christocentric life (3:1-4:1) ; Heavenly thinking (3:1-4) ; Putting off the practices of the "old self" (3:5-11) ; Putting on the practices of the "new self" (3:12-17) ; The Lordship of Christ in earthly relationships (3:18-4:1) ; Exhortation to prayer and Christian witness (4:2-6) ; The letter closing, greetings, plans, and instructions (4:7-18) ; The letter to Philemon Introduction to Philemon A basic profile : author, recipient, nature, and place of writing The situation behind the letter The purpose and significance of the letter Commentary on Philemon The letter opening (vv. 1-3) ; Thanksgiving : the "fellowship of faith" (vv. 4-7) ; The letter body : Paul's appeal concerning onesimus (vv. 8-20) ; The letter closing (vv. 21-25).
Summary: Exhibiting the same brilliant exegesis and sound practical insight found in his previous works, noted commentator Douglas J. Moo in this new volume not only explains accurately the meaning of the letters to the Colossians and to Philemon but also applies that meaning powerfully to twenty-first-century readers. Moo both interacts with the Greek text of these letters and clearly explains the English text to a contemporary audience. Informed, evangelical, methodologically astute, and displaying a careful balance between good scholarship and pastoral concern
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Vol info Status Date due Barcode
Reference (Library Use ONLY) G. Allen Fleece Library COMMENTARY (COM) - First Floor by the IT help desk office Non-fiction BS2715.P555 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) COL / PHILEM Not for loan 31923001536578

Introduction to Colossians To whom was Colossians written? : Colossae and the Colossians Who wrote the letter? : authorship When was the letter written? : date and place of writing Why was Colossians written? : the false teaching What is Colossians teaching? : the theology of the letter Christ Cosmology and the powers The church The Gospel Eschatology The Christian life Commentary on Colossians The letter opening : "just as you have received Christ Jesus as lord ..." (1:1; 2:5) ; Prescript (1:1-2) ; The powerful Gospel of God's son (1:3-23) ; The evidence of the Gospel's power among the Colossians (Thanksgiving and prayer) (1:3-14) ; The heart of the Gospel : the supremacy of Christ in creation and redemption (1:15-20) ; The hope held out in the Gospel (1:21-23) ; The mystery of Christ in Paul's ministry and Christian experience (1:24-2:5) ; The letter body : " ... continue to live your lives in Him" (2:6-4:6) ; The heart of the matter : remaining centered on Christ (2:6-7) ; The threat to christocentric living : warning about false teachers (2:8-23) ; Spiritual fullness in christ (2:8-15) ; The empty promise of the false teaching (2:16-23) ; Living a christocentric life (3:1-4:1) ; Heavenly thinking (3:1-4) ; Putting off the practices of the "old self" (3:5-11) ; Putting on the practices of the "new self" (3:12-17) ; The Lordship of Christ in earthly relationships (3:18-4:1) ; Exhortation to prayer and Christian witness (4:2-6) ; The letter closing, greetings, plans, and instructions (4:7-18) ; The letter to Philemon Introduction to Philemon A basic profile : author, recipient, nature, and place of writing The situation behind the letter The purpose and significance of the letter Commentary on Philemon The letter opening (vv. 1-3) ; Thanksgiving : the "fellowship of faith" (vv. 4-7) ; The letter body : Paul's appeal concerning onesimus (vv. 8-20) ; The letter closing (vv. 21-25).

Exhibiting the same brilliant exegesis and sound practical insight found in his previous works, noted commentator Douglas J. Moo in this new volume not only explains accurately the meaning of the letters to the Colossians and to Philemon but also applies that meaning powerfully to twenty-first-century readers. Moo both interacts with the Greek text of these letters and clearly explains the English text to a contemporary audience. Informed, evangelical, methodologically astute, and displaying a careful balance between good scholarship and pastoral concern earmarks of the Pillar New Testament Commentary series as a whole Moo's Letters to the Colossians and to Philemon will offer insights to a wide range of readers, from teachers and students, to pastors and parishioners, to scholars and laypersons. - Publisher.

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