Paradox of Salvation
Luke's Theology of the Cross
This item is a print on demand title and will be dispatched in 1-3 weeks.
Paperback / softback
£41.99
QTY
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
ISBN: 9780521018869
Number of Pages: 288
Width: 13.9 cm
Height: 21.6 cm
This study refutes the allegation that the author of Luke–Acts showed no systematic thought about the significance of Jesus's death, that is, he has no theologia crucis. Peter Doble focuses sharply on the Gospel's death scene and explores those features which appear in Luke alone, then extends the results into the longer account of Jesus's final days in Jerusalem. In the final section Doble demonstrates how specific words and patterns from Wisdom shape and fill Luke's retelling of the story of Jesus's entrapment, trials and death. Luke wanted his readers to understand that what had happened to Jesus was not a humiliating rejection but in accord with scripture's presentation of God's plan for salvation, and he modelled traditional material about Jesus's road to the crucifixion around an explanatory model which he drew from Wisdom.
Part I. Luke's Theology of the Cross: preliminary matters: 1. Luke and the cross: setting the scene; Part II. Substantial matters: Three Distinctive Elements at Luke 23.46, 47: 2. Luke's use of doxazein ton theon; 3. Dikaios and 'innocent': Luke 23.47; 4. Dikaios in Luke's Gospel; 5. Dikaios as a christological descriptor: Acts; 6. 'Father, into thy hands...'; Part III. Echoes of Wisdom in Luke's Theology of the Cross: 7. Wisdom in Luke's passion story; 8. Towards a Lukan theologia crucis.
"This is an excellent and most welcome study.... D[oble] deserves high marks for making a very strong case that we should let Luke be Luke and should not devalue his theology of the cross because it is not Pauline." Robert J. Karris, The Catholic Biblical Quarterly "...a worthwhile reference point." Richard S. Ascough, Toronto Journal of Theology