The meaning of Jesus' death : reviewing the New Testament's interpretations / Barry D. Smith.
Material type:
- 9780567670694
- 0567670694
- Jesus Christ -- Crucifixion -- Biblical teaching
- Jesus Christ -- Crucifixion -- History of doctrines
- Jesus Christ
- Bible. New Testament -- Criticism, interpretation, etc
- Bible. New Testament -- Theology
- Bible. New Testament
- Atonement -- Biblical teaching
- Atonement -- History of doctrines
- Atonement -- Biblical teaching
- Atonement -- History of doctrines
- Crucifixion -- Biblical teaching
- Crucifixion -- History of doctrines
- Theology
- BS2545.A8Â S65 2017

Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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MARY IMMACULATE LIBRARY Open Shelf | BS2545.A8 S65 2017 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 76439 |
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No cover image available | No cover image available | |||||||
BS2535.3 .M48 2003 The New Testament : | BS 2536 . P55 Introducing the cultural context of the New Testament | BS2545.A66 C53 2003 Once saved, always saved? : | BS2545.A8 S65 2017 The meaning of Jesus' death : | BS2545 .C4 C52 The great commandment of the gospel in the early church, | BS2545.C5 F46 2018 Ecclesiology / | BS2545.C5 G45 2004 House church and mission : |
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Introduction -- Servant of Yhwh, priest according to the order of Melchizedek and second human being -- Sacrificial suffering and death -- Being justified and righteousness of God -- Other expressions of the soteriological benefit of Christ's death -- Christ's death as means of deliverance from dominion of Satan -- Testing of theories of the atonement.
"Barry D. Smith studies the salvation-historical meaning of Jesus' death (commonly known as the atonement) in the New Testament. Smith works his way through the four theories of the doctrine of the atonement that have emerged in the history of Christian theology: moral influence, governmental, satisfaction and Christus victor theories. Smith works from the premise that, for a theory of the atonement to be successful, no biblical data may be omitted or distorted, and the generalized concepts used to comprehend the biblical data must be easily seen as implicit in the data. From this vantage point, Smith advances a formulation of the atonement that is best supported by the biblical text itself. The conclusion Smith reaches is that the biblical data supports both the penal-substitutionary version of the satisfaction theory and the Christus victor theory of the atonement, each of which should be viewed as two parts of a more inclusive theory of atonement present in the New Testament." --
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