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Warren Carter

  • God In The New Testament

    $34.99

    Warren Carter addresses how New Testament writings construct their presentation of God using narrative and thematic approaches. Chapters will discuss Matthew’s Gospel, Luke-Acts, John’s Gospel (and letters), Paul, post-Pauline letters, Hebrews, and Revelation. In addition there will be a chapter on the Catholic Epistles. The author uses four questions to show how God is presented:
    How is God presented in relation to Israel?
    How is God presented in relation to Jesus and the Spirit?
    How is God presented in relation to believers/disciples/the church?
    How is God presented in relation to “the world” (both material creation and humanity)?
    The approach is not to impose these questions, grid-like, on the material but to use them to surface the important factors of each writing’s emphases.

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  • New Testament Methods And Meanings

    $46.99

    In this concise, accessible book, Warren Carter and A.J. Levine introduce three aspects of New Testament study: the world of the text (plots, characters, setting, and themes), the world behind the text (the concerns, circumstances, and experiences of the early Christian communities), and the world in front of the text (the meaning for contemporary readers). As students engage the New Testament, they face a central issue that has confronted all students before them, namely, that these texts have been and are read in diverse and often quite conflicting ways. These multiple readings involve different methods: historical-critical, traditional (history of interpretation), colonial, multicultural, and sociological, with feminist and liberationist implications for the first-century readers as well as the ongoing implications for today’s reader. For example, Carter and Levine show how a text can be used by both colonizer and colonized, feminist and anti-feminist, or pro- and anti-Jewish. The authors also show how scholarly work can be both constructive and threatening to the contemporary Church and how polemical texts can be used, whether for religious study, theological reflection, or homiletical practice.

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  • New Testament : Methods And Meanings

    $56.99

    In this concise, accessible book, Warren Carter and A.J. Levine introduce three aspects of New Testament study: the world of the text (plots, characters, setting, and themes), the world behind the text (the concerns, circumstances, and experiences of the early Christian communities), and the world in front of the text (the meaning for contemporary readers). As students engage the New Testament, they face a central issue that has confronted all students before them, namely, that these texts have been and are read in diverse and often quite conflicting ways. These multiple readings involve different methods: historical-critical, traditional (history of interpretation), colonial, multicultural, and sociological, with feminist and liberationist implications for the first-century readers as well as the ongoing implications for today’s reader. For example, Carter and Levine show how a text can be used by both colonizer and colonized, feminist and anti-feminist, or pro- and anti-Jewish. The authors also show how scholarly work can be both constructive and threatening to the contemporary Church and how polemical texts can be used, whether for religious study, theological reflection, or homiletical practice.

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  • 7 Events That Shaped The New Testament World (Reprinted)

    $26.00

    This useful, concise introduction to the worlds around the New Testament focuses on seven key moments in the centuries before and after Jesus. It enlightens readers about the beginnings of the Christian movement, showing how religious, political, and economic factors were interwoven in the fabric of the New Testament world.

    Leading New Testament scholar Warren Carter has a record of providing student-friendly texts. This introduction offers a “big picture” focus and is logically and memorably organized around seven events, which Carter uses as launching pads to discuss larger cultural dynamics and sociohistorical realities that were in some way significant for followers of Jesus and the New Testament. Photos and maps are included.

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  • What Does Revelation Reveal (Student/Study Guide)

    $16.99

    1. Leaving Revelation Behind?
    2. It Is God’s Word To God’s World
    3. Cultural Accommodation Is Dangerous Part 1
    4. Cultural Accommodation Is Dangerous Part 2
    5. True Worship
    6. Judgment Is Taking Place Now
    7. The World Has A Chance To Repent
    8. The Evil Powers Behind The Scenes
    9. Time Is Up For The Eternal Empire
    10. The Coming Triumph Of God
    11. Should Revelation Be Left Behind? Reading Revelation Today

    Additional Info
    An easy-to-understand guide to one of the most mysterious books in the Bible

    What is it about Revelation that draws people to it? Is this biblical book about end-time mysteries and hidden codes? How does it relate to our present-day existence?

    The Book of Revelation has been mysterious, confusing, and misunderstood for centuries. Its content has been studied and analyzed by scholars from every corner of the globe.

    With deep theological care and sensitivity, author and teacher Warren Carter helps readers understand both the biblical context of the Book of Revelation and its meaning for us today.

    A thorough, engaging study of the Book of Revelation
    Provides fresh commentary on what the Book of Revelation means for today’s readers
    Ideal for individual study and for preachers and teachers to use for group study

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  • Roman Empire And The New Testament

    $20.99

    An indispensable introduction to Roman society, culture, law, politics, religion, and daily life as they relate to the study of the New Testament.
    The Roman Empire formed the central context in which the New Testament was written. Anyone who wishes to understand the New Testament texts must become familiar with the political, economic, societal, cultural, and religious aspects of Roman rule. Much of the New Testament deals with enabling its readers to negotiate, in an array of different manners, this pervasive imperial context. This book will help the reader see how social structures and daily practices in the Roman world illumine so much of the content of the New Testament message. For example, to grasp what Paul was saying about food offered to idols one must understand that temples in the Roman world were not “churches,” and that they functioned as political, economic, and gastronomic centers, whose religious dealings were embedded within these other functions.Brief in presentation yet broad in scope, The Roman Empire and the New Testament: An Essential Guide will introduce students to the information and ideas essential to coming to grips with the world in which early Christianity was born.

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  • Matthew And Empire

    $51.95

    In Matthew and Empire, Warren Carter argues that Matthew’s Gospel protests Roman imperialism by asserting that God’s purpose and will are performed not only by the empire and emperor but by Jesus and his community of disciples. Carter makes the claim for reading Matthew this way against the almost exclusive emphasis on the relationship with the synagogue that has long characterized Matthean scholarship. He establishes Matthew’s imperial context by examining Roman imperial ideology and material presence in Anitoch, the traditional provenance for Matthew. Carter argues that Matthean Christology, which presents Jesus as God’s agent, is shaped by claims-and protests against those claims-that the emperor and the empire are God’s agents.

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