Self-Deception and Wholeness in Paul and Matthew
English


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About The Book

Via uses the concept of self-deception as a vantage point for understanding something about Paul and Matthew. Employing an existential method in the broad sense Via asks about the nature of a pervasive phenomenon of human existence with some attention given to psychological aspects. Nevertheless this study is primarily exegetical and interpretive -- aimed at theological understanding -- rather than intensively methodological. Positing that self-deception is a deformation Via undertakes to pay attention primarily to the subversion of the self and the recovery of wholeness. Additionally attention is paid to self-deception as a social phenomenon and some consideration is given to its social causes and implications. Posing provocative questions to the New Testament Dan O. Via asks how Paul and Matthew understand the near universal human experience of self-deception and shows how each of them in a different way proclaims the power of the gospel to break through illusion and bring personal integration to the believer-disciple. . . . Vias strategy has two benefits for the preacher or interpreter: it formulates the biblical message in terms accessible to [contemporary] readers who might not otherwise be disposed to listen and it offers a fresh approach to vexed questions about the theological coherence of the New Testament canon. . . . Vias work out to stimulate lively conversation. --Richard B. Hays author of The Moral Vision of the New Testament Via achieves his extraordinary penetration of these central Christian texts by first honing his analytic tool in the disciplines of philosophy literary criticism and psychology. This insightful development of existential interpretation takes New Testament theology and ethics in a promising new direction. --Robert Morgan Oxford University author of Biblical Interpretation A mature and incisive work dealing with a perennial concern and offering fresh perspectives not only on Paul but also on our own world as well. . . . I found the comparisons of Paul and Matthew both illuminating and insightful. --Calvin Roetzel Macalester College author of Paul: The Man and the Myth Professor Via proves himself again a valiant wrestler with the truth. . . . This work is subtle and penetrating. --W. D. Davies Duke University author of The Setting of the Sermon on the Mount Dan O. Via is Professor Emeritus at The Divinity School Duke University. He is also author of The Parables The Ethics of Marks Gospel and What Is New Testament Theology?
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