Synopses & Reviews
"The Holy Spirit and Christian Origins" is an impressive set of essays by twenty-seven leading biblical scholars written in appreciation of James D. G. Dunn's distinguished career of teaching and writing and focusing on one of the most prominent topics in his writings, the Holy Spirit in early Christianity. The book is therefore a Festschrift to honor Dunn on the occasion of his sixty-fifth birthday, but it can also stand on its own as part of the standard literature on one of the most distinctive aspects of early Christianity, an area in which it has almost no competition other than the writings of Dunn himself.
Synopsis
Anyone who is interested in the rigorous study of early Christianity and who has not engaged with the works of James D. G. Dunn is not really interested in the rigorous study of early Christianity. No one would dispute that Professor Dunn is one of the most prolific New Testament scholars of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. And while a handful of scholars might have a list of publications to rival his own extensive publications list, none of them could claim to have set the agenda of scholarly study to the extent that Jimmy Dunn has done for a sustained period of time since the 1970s.
The Holy Spirit and Christian Origins comprises a selection of original essays that explore a topic that has held a prominent and distinctive place in the majority of Professor Dunn's publications. Written by twenty-seven leading scholars, this singular volume probes deep into the nascent Christian communities and their writings and investigates the early Christians' convictions concerning the Holy Spirit. Ranging widely through Scripture and across early church history, many of these essays introduce groundbreaking research in biblical studies, and some engage directly with Dunn's work in the field.
Presenting some of the best new work in New Testament studies as well as celebrating a respected career, The Holy Spirit and Christian Origins will help to stimulate further discussion and reflection in the theological academy and in the Christian church -- two sectors that Jimmy Dunn has consistently and passionately sought to straddle, nurture, and refresh.
Contributors:
Robert Banks
John M. G. Barclay
Richard Bauckham
Peder Borgen
David Catchpole
Gordon D. Fee
Victor Paul Furnish
Beverly Roberts Gaventa
Joel B. Green
Morna D. Hooker
Robert Jewett
Hermann Lichtenberger
Bruce W. Longenecker
Ulrich Luz
I. Howard Marshall
Scot McKnight
R. W. L. Moberly
Robert Morgan
J. Lionel North
Graham N. Stanton
Loren T. Stuckenbruck
Peter Stuhlmacher
Anthony C. Thiselton
Marianne Meye Thompson
Paul Trebilco
Max Turner
Alexander J. M. Wedderburn