Paul\u27s comments regarding the new creation in 2 Cor 5:17 and Gal 6:15 have tended to be understood somewhat myopically. Some argue the phrase new creation solely refers to the inward transformation believers have experienced through faith in Jesus Christ. Others argue this phrase should be understood cosmologically and linked with Isaiah\u27s new heavens and new earth Still others advocate an ecclesiological interpretation of this phrase that views Paul referring to the new community formed around Jesus Christ. In As It Was in the Beginning, Mark Owens argues that the concept of new creation should be understood (like the gospel) within the realm of Paul\u27s anthropology, cosmology, and ecclesiology. At the same time, he also argu...
Paul\u27s birthing imagery operates metaphorically in ways that correspond to John Wesley\u27s phras...
This work is a revised version of my PhD thesis, completed at St. Patrick’s College, the Pontifical...
While creation imagery in general is common in the Hebrew Bible and early Jewish literature, this es...
This thesis investigates the relationship between the portraits of new creation in the Hauptbriefe (...
This thesis explores the concept of new creation in the letter of Colossians. Although new creation ...
The main thesis of the present study is that Paul’s use of υἱοθεσία (Rom 8:15, 23; 9:4; Gal 4:5) can...
Although cosmology is not of primary interest in Paul’s epistles to the Corinthians, he sporadically...
Emmanuel Nathan's study is driven by the hermeneutical question of whether the covenantal contrasts ...
Behold, I create new heavens and a new earth; and the former shall not be remembered nor come into m...
The primary aim of this dissertation is to consider how Irenaeus of Lyons’ christocentric reading of...
God’s creative activity in the beginning is important to Paul. Yet Paul’s care for and interpretatio...
CITATION: Du Toit, Philip La G. 2016. Reading Galatians 6:16 in line with Paul’s contrast between th...
In Pisidian Antioch, Paul recounted the history of Israel up to the time of Jesus and highlighted Hi...
The present study consists of a comparison of the impact of the Christ-event on the existence of the...
This work is a revised version of my PhD thesis, completed at St. Patrick’s College, the Pontifical ...
Paul\u27s birthing imagery operates metaphorically in ways that correspond to John Wesley\u27s phras...
This work is a revised version of my PhD thesis, completed at St. Patrick’s College, the Pontifical...
While creation imagery in general is common in the Hebrew Bible and early Jewish literature, this es...
This thesis investigates the relationship between the portraits of new creation in the Hauptbriefe (...
This thesis explores the concept of new creation in the letter of Colossians. Although new creation ...
The main thesis of the present study is that Paul’s use of υἱοθεσία (Rom 8:15, 23; 9:4; Gal 4:5) can...
Although cosmology is not of primary interest in Paul’s epistles to the Corinthians, he sporadically...
Emmanuel Nathan's study is driven by the hermeneutical question of whether the covenantal contrasts ...
Behold, I create new heavens and a new earth; and the former shall not be remembered nor come into m...
The primary aim of this dissertation is to consider how Irenaeus of Lyons’ christocentric reading of...
God’s creative activity in the beginning is important to Paul. Yet Paul’s care for and interpretatio...
CITATION: Du Toit, Philip La G. 2016. Reading Galatians 6:16 in line with Paul’s contrast between th...
In Pisidian Antioch, Paul recounted the history of Israel up to the time of Jesus and highlighted Hi...
The present study consists of a comparison of the impact of the Christ-event on the existence of the...
This work is a revised version of my PhD thesis, completed at St. Patrick’s College, the Pontifical ...
Paul\u27s birthing imagery operates metaphorically in ways that correspond to John Wesley\u27s phras...
This work is a revised version of my PhD thesis, completed at St. Patrick’s College, the Pontifical...
While creation imagery in general is common in the Hebrew Bible and early Jewish literature, this es...