Puzzling Passages in Paul: Forty Conundrums Calmly Considered


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About The Book

Few Christian writings have had the world-changing impact of St Pauls epistles to the churches and yet from the very beginning these works proved themselves to be tricky texts. The Second Letter of Peter commenting about them says: There are some things in them that are hard to understand (2 Pet 3:16). Indeed! To this day many issues of their interpretation remain highly contested. In this book Anthony Thiselton grasps the nettle and examines forty puzzling passages from Pauls epistles. He considers the various scholarly proposals about their meaning and offers his own reflections in the hope of dispersing fog and shedding light and of expounding a coherent and self-consistent Paul. This is an exhilarating and infuriating book by Tony Thiselton. It is exhilarating because he does not shy away from many of the most troubling passages in the Apostle Pauls letters but infuriating because Thiselton cannot easily or predictably be put in a box regarding his conclusions. In his inimitable style Thiselton takes each passage and explains the issues weighs the options and makes his proposals for others to judge for themselves. Many readers are bound to find this a very helpful book written by one of our senior Pauline scholars. --Stanley E. Porter President McMaster Divinity College Anthony Thiselton is Emeritus Professor of Christian Theology and Head of Department in the University of Nottingham UK. He is also Emeritus Canon Theologian of Leicester and Southwell and Nottingham. He has written nearly thirty books including major works on biblical interpretation and Pauls letters. He holds four doctorates and is a Fellow of Kings College London and a Fellow of the British Academy.
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