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For centuries St. Paul' version of the Christian fath and Jesus' central role as savior and Lord has been the central and dominating theological construct. In it Jesus functions as a kind of token assigned various theological roles - Messian, Lord. In all of this Jesus in the Gospels of Matthew, Mark and Luke is in a sense effaced. There is little attention to his actual status as a Jewish preacher and religious reformer of his time. The actual contexts in which Jesus functioned have been shaped to make him an exalted figure - God with skin on, as it were. I argue that a better reading of the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
For centuries St. Paul' version of the Christian fath and Jesus' central role as savior and Lord has been the central and dominating theological construct. In it Jesus functions as a kind of token assigned various theological roles - Messian, Lord. In all of this Jesus in the Gospels of Matthew, Mark and Luke is in a sense effaced. There is little attention to his actual status as a Jewish preacher and religious reformer of his time. The actual contexts in which Jesus functioned have been shaped to make him an exalted figure - God with skin on, as it were. I argue that a better reading of the human Jesus keeps him as teacher and healer somewhat at a distance from Paul's Jesus. This does not make Jesus merely a simple teacher of morals. It re-locates him as a preacher who after the resurrection has a status which Mark, Matthew and Luke don't understand and which Paul over-determines.. Only John in his gospel allows for Jesus' humanity and sets out a way that he can be understood as savior.
Autorenporträt
William Coats, an Episcopal priest was a university chaplain at four American universities for 15 years during the 1960's and 1970's until moving to parish ministry until retiring in 2003. He is the author of one book, God in Public (1976) and has authored a number of articles for books and journals.