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Reading Luke: A Literary and Theological Commentary
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Reading Luke: A Literary and Theological Commentary in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $32.25

Barnes and Noble
Reading Luke: A Literary and Theological Commentary in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $32.25
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Size: OS
In
Reading Luke
, from the
Reading the New Testament, Second Series
, Andrew Arterbury seeks to read and expound upon the final form of the Gospel of Luke from both a literary and theological angle.
To buttress both endeavors, Arterbury routinely asks how the first readers (or listeners) of Luke's Gospel likely made sense of both the literary flow of the book as well as the theological convictions it espouses. To ask about the readers Luke first envisioned when he wrote this Gospel is to ask how late first-century Jewish and Gentile Christians, enmeshed in the cultures of the Mediterranean basin, likely responded to Luke's Gospel-a vivid narrative about the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus, God's anointed Son, Savior, and prophet.
Edited by
Todd D. Still
, the Charles J. and Eleanor McLerran DeLancey Dean & William M. Hinson Professor of Christian Scriptures at Baylor University's George W. Truett Theological Seminary, the
presents cutting-edge biblical research in accessible language.
Andrew E. Arterbury
is Associate Professor of Christian Scriptures at Baylor University's George W. Truett Theological Seminary. Andrew received his academic training at Baylor University (BA and PhD) and Princeton Theological Seminary (MDiv and ThM). After completing his PhD, he began teaching in Baylor's Honors College in 2003 before moving to Truett Theological Seminary in 2007. In addition to
, he is the author of
Entertaining Angels: Early Christian Hospitality in Its Mediterranean Setting
and
Engaging the Christian Scriptures: An Introduction to the Bible
.
Praise for
"Andrew Arterbury carefully yet succinctly walks us through Luke's Gospel. Along the way he rightly keeps in mind the larger context of this Gospel and its intertextual relation to Israel's earlier Scriptures." -
CraigS. Keener, F. M. and Ada Thompson Professor of Biblical Studies, Asbury Theological Seminary
"The literary artistry of the Gospel of Luke makes it an ideal text for careful literary analysis. Andrew Arterbury's new book,
Reading Luke: A Literary and Theological Commentary
, offers precisely that- a perceptive and sensitive reading of Luke's narrative, informed by strategic probes of the cultural environment in which Luke wrote. Arterbury provides a reliable guide to this Gospel and to the theological vision that comes to expression in Luke's artful narrative. -
John Carroll, Harriet Robertson Fitts Memorial Professor of New Testament, Union Presbyterian Seminary
Reading Luke
, from the
Reading the New Testament, Second Series
, Andrew Arterbury seeks to read and expound upon the final form of the Gospel of Luke from both a literary and theological angle.
To buttress both endeavors, Arterbury routinely asks how the first readers (or listeners) of Luke's Gospel likely made sense of both the literary flow of the book as well as the theological convictions it espouses. To ask about the readers Luke first envisioned when he wrote this Gospel is to ask how late first-century Jewish and Gentile Christians, enmeshed in the cultures of the Mediterranean basin, likely responded to Luke's Gospel-a vivid narrative about the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus, God's anointed Son, Savior, and prophet.
Edited by
Todd D. Still
, the Charles J. and Eleanor McLerran DeLancey Dean & William M. Hinson Professor of Christian Scriptures at Baylor University's George W. Truett Theological Seminary, the
presents cutting-edge biblical research in accessible language.
Andrew E. Arterbury
is Associate Professor of Christian Scriptures at Baylor University's George W. Truett Theological Seminary. Andrew received his academic training at Baylor University (BA and PhD) and Princeton Theological Seminary (MDiv and ThM). After completing his PhD, he began teaching in Baylor's Honors College in 2003 before moving to Truett Theological Seminary in 2007. In addition to
, he is the author of
Entertaining Angels: Early Christian Hospitality in Its Mediterranean Setting
and
Engaging the Christian Scriptures: An Introduction to the Bible
.
Praise for
"Andrew Arterbury carefully yet succinctly walks us through Luke's Gospel. Along the way he rightly keeps in mind the larger context of this Gospel and its intertextual relation to Israel's earlier Scriptures." -
CraigS. Keener, F. M. and Ada Thompson Professor of Biblical Studies, Asbury Theological Seminary
"The literary artistry of the Gospel of Luke makes it an ideal text for careful literary analysis. Andrew Arterbury's new book,
Reading Luke: A Literary and Theological Commentary
, offers precisely that- a perceptive and sensitive reading of Luke's narrative, informed by strategic probes of the cultural environment in which Luke wrote. Arterbury provides a reliable guide to this Gospel and to the theological vision that comes to expression in Luke's artful narrative. -
John Carroll, Harriet Robertson Fitts Memorial Professor of New Testament, Union Presbyterian Seminary
In
Reading Luke
, from the
Reading the New Testament, Second Series
, Andrew Arterbury seeks to read and expound upon the final form of the Gospel of Luke from both a literary and theological angle.
To buttress both endeavors, Arterbury routinely asks how the first readers (or listeners) of Luke's Gospel likely made sense of both the literary flow of the book as well as the theological convictions it espouses. To ask about the readers Luke first envisioned when he wrote this Gospel is to ask how late first-century Jewish and Gentile Christians, enmeshed in the cultures of the Mediterranean basin, likely responded to Luke's Gospel-a vivid narrative about the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus, God's anointed Son, Savior, and prophet.
Edited by
Todd D. Still
, the Charles J. and Eleanor McLerran DeLancey Dean & William M. Hinson Professor of Christian Scriptures at Baylor University's George W. Truett Theological Seminary, the
presents cutting-edge biblical research in accessible language.
Andrew E. Arterbury
is Associate Professor of Christian Scriptures at Baylor University's George W. Truett Theological Seminary. Andrew received his academic training at Baylor University (BA and PhD) and Princeton Theological Seminary (MDiv and ThM). After completing his PhD, he began teaching in Baylor's Honors College in 2003 before moving to Truett Theological Seminary in 2007. In addition to
, he is the author of
Entertaining Angels: Early Christian Hospitality in Its Mediterranean Setting
and
Engaging the Christian Scriptures: An Introduction to the Bible
.
Praise for
"Andrew Arterbury carefully yet succinctly walks us through Luke's Gospel. Along the way he rightly keeps in mind the larger context of this Gospel and its intertextual relation to Israel's earlier Scriptures." -
CraigS. Keener, F. M. and Ada Thompson Professor of Biblical Studies, Asbury Theological Seminary
"The literary artistry of the Gospel of Luke makes it an ideal text for careful literary analysis. Andrew Arterbury's new book,
Reading Luke: A Literary and Theological Commentary
, offers precisely that- a perceptive and sensitive reading of Luke's narrative, informed by strategic probes of the cultural environment in which Luke wrote. Arterbury provides a reliable guide to this Gospel and to the theological vision that comes to expression in Luke's artful narrative. -
John Carroll, Harriet Robertson Fitts Memorial Professor of New Testament, Union Presbyterian Seminary
Reading Luke
, from the
Reading the New Testament, Second Series
, Andrew Arterbury seeks to read and expound upon the final form of the Gospel of Luke from both a literary and theological angle.
To buttress both endeavors, Arterbury routinely asks how the first readers (or listeners) of Luke's Gospel likely made sense of both the literary flow of the book as well as the theological convictions it espouses. To ask about the readers Luke first envisioned when he wrote this Gospel is to ask how late first-century Jewish and Gentile Christians, enmeshed in the cultures of the Mediterranean basin, likely responded to Luke's Gospel-a vivid narrative about the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus, God's anointed Son, Savior, and prophet.
Edited by
Todd D. Still
, the Charles J. and Eleanor McLerran DeLancey Dean & William M. Hinson Professor of Christian Scriptures at Baylor University's George W. Truett Theological Seminary, the
presents cutting-edge biblical research in accessible language.
Andrew E. Arterbury
is Associate Professor of Christian Scriptures at Baylor University's George W. Truett Theological Seminary. Andrew received his academic training at Baylor University (BA and PhD) and Princeton Theological Seminary (MDiv and ThM). After completing his PhD, he began teaching in Baylor's Honors College in 2003 before moving to Truett Theological Seminary in 2007. In addition to
, he is the author of
Entertaining Angels: Early Christian Hospitality in Its Mediterranean Setting
and
Engaging the Christian Scriptures: An Introduction to the Bible
.
Praise for
"Andrew Arterbury carefully yet succinctly walks us through Luke's Gospel. Along the way he rightly keeps in mind the larger context of this Gospel and its intertextual relation to Israel's earlier Scriptures." -
CraigS. Keener, F. M. and Ada Thompson Professor of Biblical Studies, Asbury Theological Seminary
"The literary artistry of the Gospel of Luke makes it an ideal text for careful literary analysis. Andrew Arterbury's new book,
Reading Luke: A Literary and Theological Commentary
, offers precisely that- a perceptive and sensitive reading of Luke's narrative, informed by strategic probes of the cultural environment in which Luke wrote. Arterbury provides a reliable guide to this Gospel and to the theological vision that comes to expression in Luke's artful narrative. -
John Carroll, Harriet Robertson Fitts Memorial Professor of New Testament, Union Presbyterian Seminary

















