CONTENTS:
Introduction
Klyne Snodgrass
‚In Him All Things Hold Together‘: An Ecology of Atonement
William P. Brown
Response to Brown
Michael Le Febvre
Effecting the Covenant: A (Not So) New, New Testament Model for the Atonement
Michael Gorman
Response to Gorman
Troy Martin
Response to Martin
Michael Gorman
‚Anyone Hung On A Tree Is Under God’s Curse‘ (Deuteronomy 21:23): Jesus‘ Crucifixion and Interreligious Exegetical Debate in Late Antiquity
Peter W. Martens
‚Happily Ever After?‘ Paul Peter Waldenstrom: Be Ye Reconciled to God
Michelle A. Clifton-Soderstrom
Response to Clifton-Soderstrom
Timothy L. Johnson
The Social Dimension of Atonement in the Torah
Viktor Ber
Response to Ber
Jeremy J. Wynne
‚To Those Who Were Distant and Those Who Were Near‘: Atonement, Identity, and Identification
Brian Bantum
An Evangelical Feminist Perspective on Traditional Atonement Models
Linda D. Peacore
Response to Peacore
Jo Ann Deasy
Saving Bodies: Anagogical Transposition in St. Gregory of Nyssa’s Commentary on the Song of Songs
Hans Boersma
Ransomed, Healed, Restored, Forgiven (John 5:1-16)
Carol Noren
Über den Autor
Klyne Snodgrass is Paul W. Brandel Professor of New Testament Studies at North Park Theological Seminary in Chicago, Illinois.