How do we think about the theology of the book of Jeremiah? Do we consider themes section by section, or do we step back and look at the whole? John Goldingay says ‘both.’
In The Theology of Jeremiah, Goldingay considers the prophet Jeremiah himself, his individual circumstances and those of Judah, and his message. Though Jeremiah’s message varies throughout the book, we gain insights into Jeremiah’s theology by viewing the book in its entirety. In doing so, we learn about God, Israel as the people of God, the nature of wrongdoing and prophecy, and what we know about the future.
قائمة المحتويات
Preface
Part One: The Man, the Scroll, the Story, the Messages
1. The Man and the Scroll
2. Reading Jeremiah Backwards
3. The Themes in Jeremiah 1–25
4. The Themes in Jeremiah 26–52
Part Two: The Theology of Jeremiah
5. God
6. The People of God
7. Wrongdoing
8. Being a Prophet
9. The Future
Further Reading
Subject Index
Scripture Index
عن المؤلف
John Goldingay (Ph D, University of Nottingham; DD, Archbishop of Canterbury at Lambeth) is David Allan Hubbard Professor of Old Testament at Fuller Theological Seminary. His many books include The Theology of the Book of Isaiah, Do We Need the New Testament?, Biblical Theology, and a three-volume Old Testament Theology. He has also published a seventeen-volume Old Testament for Everyone series, where much of this translation first appeared.