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The New Testament and intellectual humility / Grant Macaskill. [print]

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Oxford, New York : Oxford University Press, [(c)2018.Edition: First EditionDescription: viii, 270 pages ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780198799856
  • 0198799853
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • BS2361.3.N498 2018
  • BS2361.3.M116.N498 2018
Available additional physical forms:
  • COPYRIGHT NOT covered - Click this link to request copyright permission:
Contents:
Virtue, selfhood, and intellectual humility Humilty in the Old Testament Sketching the Christian self in the New Testament writings ; 'The old has gone, the new has come': the apocalyptic character of the New Testament and its relevance to intellectual humility The incarnation and intellectual humility: 'we have the mind of Christ' ; Intellectual humility and the practices of faith: prayerful patience and gratitude Intellectual humility and the community of the sacraments Intellectual humility and the reading of scripture Concluding synthesis.
Summary: This study examines how the New Testament scriptures might form and foster intellectual humility within Christian communities. It is informed by recent interdisciplinary interest in intellectual humility, and concerned to appreciate the distinctive representations of the virtue offered by the New Testament writers on their own terms. It argues that the intellectual virtue is cast as a particular expression of the broader Christian virtue of humility, something which itself proceeds from the believer's union with Christ, through which personal identity is reconstituted by the operation of the Holy Spirit. This demands that we speak of 'virtue' in ways determined by the acting presence of Jesus Christ that overcomes sin and evil in human lives and in the world. The Christian account of the intellectual virtue of humility is framed by this conflict, as the minds of believers who live together within the Christian community struggle with natural arrogance and selfishness, and come to share in the mind of Christ. The new identity that emerges creates a fresh openness to truth, as the capacity of the sinful mind to distort truth is exposed and challenged. This affects not just knowledge and perception, but also volition: for these ancient writers, a humble mind makes good decisions that reflect judgements decisively shaped by the sacrificial love of Jesus Christ. By presenting 'humility of mind' as a characteristic of the One who is worshipped--Jesus Christ--the New Testament writers insist that we acknowledge the virtue not just as an admission of human deficiency or limitation, but as a positive affirmation of our rightful place within the divine economy. https://www.amazon.com/New-Testament-Intellectual-Humility/dp/0198799853/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=9780198799856&qid=1570477115&sr=8-1
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COPYRIGHT NOT covered - Click this link to request copyright permission:

Virtue, selfhood, and intellectual humility Humilty in the Old Testament Sketching the Christian self in the New Testament writings ; 'The old has gone, the new has come': the apocalyptic character of the New Testament and its relevance to intellectual humility The incarnation and intellectual humility: 'we have the mind of Christ' ; Intellectual humility and the practices of faith: prayerful patience and gratitude Intellectual humility and the community of the sacraments Intellectual humility and the reading of scripture Concluding synthesis.

This study examines how the New Testament scriptures might form and foster intellectual humility within Christian communities. It is informed by recent interdisciplinary interest in intellectual humility, and concerned to appreciate the distinctive representations of the virtue offered by the New Testament writers on their own terms. It argues that the intellectual virtue is cast as a particular expression of the broader Christian virtue of humility, something which itself proceeds from the believer's union with Christ, through which personal identity is reconstituted by the operation of the Holy Spirit. This demands that we speak of 'virtue' in ways determined by the acting presence of Jesus Christ that overcomes sin and evil in human lives and in the world. The Christian account of the intellectual virtue of humility is framed by this conflict, as the minds of believers who live together within the Christian community struggle with natural arrogance and selfishness, and come to share in the mind of Christ. The new identity that emerges creates a fresh openness to truth, as the capacity of the sinful mind to distort truth is exposed and challenged. This affects not just knowledge and perception, but also volition: for these ancient writers, a humble mind makes good decisions that reflect judgements decisively shaped by the sacrificial love of Jesus Christ. By presenting 'humility of mind' as a characteristic of the One who is worshipped--Jesus Christ--the New Testament writers insist that we acknowledge the virtue not just as an admission of human deficiency or limitation, but as a positive affirmation of our rightful place within the divine economy.

https://www.amazon.com/New-Testament-Intellectual-Humility/dp/0198799853/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=9780198799856&qid=1570477115&sr=8-1

Grant Macaskill is the Kirby Laing Chair of New Testament Exegesis at the University of Aberdeen. He was previously Senior Lecturer in New Testament at the University of St Andrews, where he had completed both his doctoral and postdoctoral projects. His research engages with the New Testament as a coherent body of theological literature emerging from the diverse contexts of late Second Temple Judaism.

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