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Overview"Where does God's revelation reside, in the event or in the interpretation? If history is about the creation of meaning, what does it mean to say that God reveals God's self in history? Those who take seriously scripture as revelatory must wrestle with such fundamental questions and their far-reaching implications. Dan Via addresses these and related issues in this original volume. The title of the book, particularly the ""and/as,"" demands exposition. To speak of God's revelation and human reception is to suggest that God's self-disclosure is something other than and prior to the human response that it elicits. To speak of God's self-manifestation as human reception is to suggest that revelation does not occur apart from the specific ways in which it is received by human beings and that human response is in fact, a positive and constitutive factor in the actualization of revelation. In brief, then, this book is a study of what several New Testament writers understand by the revelation of God to humankind, including both the ""and"" and the ""as."" An opening chapter sketches in a selective way a provisional definition of revelation that embraces a horizon reaching back into neo-orthodoxy while also coming close to the present. Then follow chapters on the word as content and the elusive historical element, including the place of the historical Jesus in revelation; a discussion of Paul based on 2 Cor. 2:14-4:15, with special reference to the four elements of the revelation situation; the use of the historical setting of Mark as a constituent of actualized revelation for all four Gospels followed by similar chapters on Mathew and John. A concluding chapter redescribes the four constituent elements of the revelation situation and relects on some of their interrelationships. Here, then, is a resourceful and thorough study of an important issue in New Testament and systematic theology, and one that takes human action and reception into full account. Dan O. Via is Emeritus Professor of New Testament as Duke University Divinity School and author of Self-Deception and Wholeness in Paul and Matthew." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Dan O. ViaPublisher: Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd. Imprint: Continuum International Publishing Group - Trinity Dimensions: Width: 13.80cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.300kg ISBN: 9781563381980ISBN 10: 1563381982 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 01 June 1997 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsReviews. ..careful exegetical work brings the reader face to face with a New Testament writer who himself embodies the work of human reception in the creation of a moment of revelation. Gail R. O'Day, Chandler School of Theology, Emory University, Georgia (Interpretation, Jan '99)--, Interpretation . ..Via provides us with insightful analyses of the NT texts and excellent discussions of the secondary literature; even minor points receive remarkably thorough attention... A fine contribution. Religious Studies Review--, Religious Studies Review [A] short review cannot capture the sophistication of the comprehensive and dense argument of this book. It is the capstone of a career...On every page V.'s assimilation of the main directions of scholarship and his judicious critique of them by his more systematic procedures is manifest. Theological Studies--, Theological Studies Biblical scholars who still want to speak of divine revelation seem uncertain how to do so persuasively. Dan Via's sophisticated reconstruction of the concept is what New Testament theology today needs most. It equips him to make modern theological sense of four New Testament writers' understandings of their message. This is theological interpretation at its best. Robert Morgan, University of Oxford--, The doctrine of revelation, central to every theological position at mid-century and at the heart of major theological controversies, is largely marginalized in current theology. Working at the juncture of New Testament studies and constructive theology, Dan Via's stimulating book promises to provoke a fresh discussion of this neglected topic. David H. Kelsey, Yale University The doctrine of revelation, central to every theological position at mid-century and at the heart of major theological controversies, is largely marginalized in current theology. Working at the juncture of New Testament studies and constructive theology, Dan Via's stimulating book promises to provoke a fresh discussion of this neglected topic. David H. Kelsey, Yale University . ..Via provides us with insightful analyses of the NT texts and excellent discussions of the secondary literature; even minor points receive remarkably thorough attention... A fine contribution. Religious Studies Review--, Religious Studies Review Biblical scholars who still want to speak of divine revelation seem uncertain how to do so persuasively. Dan Via's sophisticated reconstruction of the concept is what New Testament theology today needs most. It equips him to make modern theological sense of four New Testament writers' understandings of their message. This is theological interpretation at its best. Robert Morgan, University of Oxford--, . ..careful exegetical work brings the reader face to face with a New Testament writer who himself embodies the work of human reception in the creation of a moment of revelation. Gail R. O'Day, Chandler School of Theology, Emory University, Georgia (Interpretation, Jan '99)--, Interpretation [A] short review cannot capture the sophistication of the comprehensive and dense argument of this book. It is the capstone of a career...On every page V.'s assimilation of the main directions of scholarship and his judicious critique of them by his more systematic procedures is manifest. Theological Studies--, Theological Studies [A] short review cannot capture the sophistication of the comprehensive and dense argument of this book. It is the capstone of a career...On every page V.'s assimilation of the main directions of scholarship and his judicious critique of them by his more systematic procedures is manifest. Theological Studies--, Theological Studies [A] short review cannot capture the sophistication of the comprehensive and dense argument of this book. It is the capstone of a career...On every page V.'s assimilation of the main directions of scholarship and his judicious critique of them by his more systematic procedures is manifest. ----John Topel, S.J. Theological Studies Author InformationDan O. Via is Emeritus Professor of New Testament as Duke University Divinity School and author of Self-Deception and Wholeness in Paul and Matthew. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |