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Paperback New Testament and Criticism Book

ISBN: 0802816800

ISBN13: 9780802816801

New Testament and Criticism

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Book Overview

One unfortunate consequence of the bitter fundamentalist-modernist controversy which raged in the early twenties has been the strongly negative attitude toward biblical criticism assumed by some of... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Excellent Guide for the Beginner

George Eldon Ladd (1911-1982) was for years a professor of New Testament at Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena. Perhaps more than any writer in evangelical circles, Ladd was instrumental in moving many from premillenial Dispensationalism to historic premillenialism. He wrote a theology of the New Testament, a commentary on Revelation, and a number of works on bible prophecy and the Kingdom of God. 1966's THE NEW TESTAMENT AND CRITICISM remains a useful book on the inspiration and interpretation of the New Testament. Ladd argues that the development of "critical" approaches to the New Testament is a fact which, notwithstanding the possibility of abuse, is here to stay. For example, textual criticism has shown that the text behind the Authorized Version is almost certainly less reliable than texts that have been recently discovered. The modern view that Mark's Gospel was written first and that Matthew and Luke used Mark plus a "Q" source, although not certain, is highly probable. He discusses textual criticism, linguistic criticism, literary criticism, form criticism, historical criticism, and comparative religion criticism. One of the best features of this book is that Ladd works his way through certain problems, such as the ending of Mark, the difficult passage in Philippians, the differences between the Synoptics and John among other issues. This gives the student insight into just how complex biblical interpretation can be. Ladd's presentation of these topics is even handed. He concedes that critical approaches are often used by liberals to reach negative results based on their presuppositions. At the same time, when used "critically," critical methodology leads to fairly conservative conclusions about the New Testament. As I said, THE NEW TESTAMENT AND CRITICISM remains a valuable guide to New Testament criticism from a moderately conservative approach. I'm not aware of a more recent book that covers these topics from a similar position.
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