
Matthew 11:2-20:34
Jeffrey A. Gibbs
Bok · Engelsk · 2010 · Kommentarer
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Omfang | XLIII, 551-1025 sider : illustrasjoner
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Opplysninger | Fortsettelse av kommentar til Matteus med tittel 'Matthew 1:1-11:1', utgitt av Concordia Publishing House i 2006.. - General editor: Christopher W. Mitchell. - Commentary / 11:2; 16:20 Jesus' ministry is opposed in Israel : the question of Jesus' identity / Themes in Matthew 11:2-16:20 / 11:2/6 John's question and Jesus' identity / 11:7/15 The significance of John the Baptist / Excursus the history of the interpretation of Matthew 11:12 / 11:16-24 Jesus warns "this generation" / 11:25-30 God over all and Christ for all / 12:1-14 Lord of the Sabbath; hated! / 12:15-21 The servant withdraws, but nothing will stop his work for the nations / 12:22-37 Jesus reigns in the spirit : are you with Him? / 12:38-45 Proof of Jesus' teaching : the sign of Jonah / 12:46-50 Even "family" is redefined in Jesus / The parables of Jesus in Matthew 13 : introduction, hermeneutics, and structure / 13:1-23 the sower: parable and paradigm for Jesus' ministry of the reign of God / 13:24-35 Jesus teaches the crowds in parables : the weeds of the field, the mustard seed, and the leaven / 13:36-50 Jesus assures his disciples in parables : interpretation of the weeds, and the treasure, the pearl, and the dragnet / 13:51-52 Conclusion to the parables discourse : a discipled scribe is ready to reveal the mysteries / 13:53-58 Questioning and rejection in Nazareth / 14:1-13a Violence against the reign of God : the murder of John the Baptist / 14:13-21 Israel's God feeds the people in the desert / 14:22-33 Who is He? Jesus walks on the storm and saves / 14:34-36 Compassionate healings : God's reign continues / 15:1-20 Majors not minors : the problem of real uncleanness. / 15:21-28 Unexpectedly great faith in the Messiah of Israel / 15:29-38 Healing and compassion : more bread for the crowds / 15:39; 16:4 Again, no sign but the sign of Jonah! / 16:5-12 Beware the leaven, O little-faiths! / 16:13-20 Confessing the Christ, God's son : the Father reveals and the Son will build / 16:21; 28:20 Matthew, part 3 : the road to the cross, the empty tomb, and all the nations / 16:21; 20:34 Passion predictions and disciples' incomprehension / 16:21/-8 Big cross and little cross : God's way in Jesus is out in the open / 17:1-8 Glory unto suffering : Jesus' transfiguration / 17:9/13 Already and not yet : Elijah, John, and Jesus / 17:14-20 faithful Jesus and faithless disciples : faith like a mustard seed / 17:22-27 The Son of Man and the King's sons on the way to Jerusalem / Caring for the greatest : the context and flow of thought in Matthew / 18:1-35 18:1-5 True greatness / 18:6-14 Preserving and finding the little ones / 18:15-20 Urgent care for the greatest : gaining a brother / 18:21-35 Unlimited divine forgiveness : for and through the disciples of Jesus / 19:1-12 Gd's way for marriage / 19:13-15 Again, the children and blundering disciples / 19:16-26 Wealth and piety : God alone can save! / 19:27-20:16 First and last, last and first in the reign of heaven / 20:17-19 The third passion prediction / 20:20-28 God's way of glory and greatness / 20:29-34 That we may see : Jesus heals two blind men. - Continue your study of Matthew with the second volume of Dr. Gibb’s Concordia Commentary on Matthew: “Therefore go and make disciples of all nations,” (Matthew 28:19) is the evangelistic call within Matthew, and Dr. Jeffrey Gibbs maintains that the text of Matthew was intended to serve “all nations” and the whole church rather than the some singular congregation as is argued by many contemporary scholars. Still, Gibbs interprets the text in light of the original cultural and religious context in which Matthew wrote, as well as the audience for whom he wrote. He employs a narrative approach that carefully attends to the literary structure of Matthew’s unfolding message in his Gospel. Themes that receive particular emphasis include Jesus’ mission to save his people from their sins; the reign of God in Jesus; the Son of God’s vicarious role as the substitute for Israel and for us; Jesus’ fulfillment of the OT; Jesus’ ministry of mighty word (preaching, calling disciples, teaching) and mighty deed (healing the sick, exorcizing, and raising the dead); how God’s grace in Jesus now comes to us through Word and Sacrament; and eschatology—that the end times have begun already with Jesus’ ministry, and the Christian lives with joyful hope in the promises yet to be fulfilled on the Last Day.
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ISBN | 978-0-7586-1099-7
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