The nature of Lukan christology has been much debated in recent years,
with scholars claiming the pre-eminence of such categories as Lord,
Prophet, Christ, or Isaianic Servant. In the present work the author
examines one major theme within Luke's christology, that of the coming
king from the line of David. A study of the Lukan birth narrative and
the speeches in Acts reveals that Luke shows a strong interest in this
royal-messianic theme, introducing it into passages which are
introductory and programmatic for his christology as a sermon,
portraying Jesus in strongly prophetic terms. The author seeks a
synthesis of these seemingly conflicting royal and prophetic portraits
in Luke's interpretation of the Old Testament book of Isaiah. When
Isaiah is read as a unity, the eschatological deliverer is at the same
time Davidic king (Isa. 9.11), suffering servant of Yahweh (Isa.
42-53), and prophet herald of salvation (Isa. 61), leading God's
people on an eschatological new exodus. On the basis of this synthesis
the christology of Luke-Acts is seen to be both consistent and
unified, forming an integral part of Luke's wider purpose in his
two-volume work.
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The Promise and its Fulfilment in Lukan Christology
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780567023964
Publisert
2015
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter