Synopses & Reviews
We are used to the idea of people believing in Christ, but did the early church consider that Jesus also had faith in God? This book examines the meaning of faith in Judaism and Graeco-Roman literature, identifies two main trajectories of interest in the question of Jesus' faith, and traces the progress of these trajectories through the literature of the first four Christian centuries, up to the point where the interpretation of Jesus as a man of faith eventually proved incompatible with the orthodoxy of Nicene Christianity.
Review
"...a positive contribution to the familiar debate about the 'faith of Christ.'...Wallis has very helpfully set this discussion within the broader context of interest in Jesus' faith throughout the New Testament and its developments." David A. deSilva, The Catholic Biblical Quarterly"A significant addition to the study of early christological developments." James L. Jaquette, Religious Studies Review"Wallis maps out the evidence for the faith of Jesus....The study moves the discussion beyond solutions based only on lexical or grammatical considerations and provides a context in which faith was understood as early Christian traditions developed....A significant addition to the study of early christological developements." James L. Jaquette, Religious Studies Review
Synopsis
Evaluates the evidence for the early church's interest in Jesus as a believer in God.
Table of Contents
1. Setting the scene; 2. Jesus's faith in the Synoptic Gospels; 3. Jesus's faith in the Pauline Epistles; 4. Jesus's faith in the deutero-Pauline and Pastoral Epistles; 5. Jesus's faith in Hebrews and Revelation; 6. Jesus' faith in extra-biblical sources; 7. Concluding remarks.