This is a print on demand book and is therefore non- returnable.A Pathway into the Holy Scripture contains revised versions of papers given at the jubilee meeting of the Tyndale Fellows
This is a print on demand book and is therefore non- returnable.A Pathway into the Holy Scripture contains revised versions of papers given at the jubilee meeting of the Tyndale Fellowship for Biblical and Theological Research, and event that coincided with the 500th anniversary of the birth of the English reformer William Tyndale. The book includes a discussion of Tyndale as biblical interpreter, surveys of current trends in Old and New Testament scholarship, treatments of biblical theology and of Paul's view of Scripture, chapters on biblical hermeneutics and the doctrine of inspiration, and studies discussing the role of Scripture in the church in earlier periods and in the present day.
Contributors:
David F. Wright
Carl R. Trueman
Carl E. Armerding
Craig L. Blomberg
Brian S. Rosner
Anthony C. Thiselton
Kevin Vanhoozer
A. Morgan Derham
H. G. M. Williamson
I. Howard Marshall
Gerald Bray
Nigel M. de S. Cameron
Thomas A. Noble
Anthony N. S. Lane
R. T. France
—Principal, Wycliffe Hall, Oxford
"One of the main influences on the impressive development of evangelical scholarship over the last fifty years has been the Tyndale Fellowship of Biblical and Theological Research. These papers from some of its leading members reflect not only on the achievement of the past half-century but also on the land which is still to be possessed. . . . Anyone who imagine that evangelical theology is a fixed system incapable of change will find these papers surprising reading. I know of no better place to look for an overview of what is now an increasingly prominent strand in theological thought, and one that can no longer be dismissed as either boring or na�ve."
D. A. Carson
—Trinity Evangelical Divinity School
"Although everyone will find bits in this book with which to disagree — or perhaps precisely because of that reason — few will have cause to criticize the competence, breadth, and stimulation of the discussion. Most of these essays ask the right questions about Scripture, engage opposing positions thoughtfully and firmly, challenge cherished biases, or break into fresh conceptualities that help Christian thinkers better grasp the nature of Scripture."
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Philip E. Satterthwaite is a research fellow, Tyndale House, Cambridge, and an affiliated lecturer in the Faculty of Oriental Studies, Cambridge.
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