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End of Story?

eBook - Same-Sex Relationships and the Narratives of Evangelical Mission
ISBN/EAN: 9781532670190
Umbreit-Nr.: 1558722

Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 188 S.
Format in cm:
Einband: Keine Angabe

Erschienen am 12.11.2019
Auflage: 1/2019


E-Book
Format: EPUB
DRM: Adobe DRM
€ 32,95
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  • Zusatztext
    • This book is an exercise in a thoroughgoing narrative theology. The social and legal validation of same-sex relationships in the West over the last two decades has presented an immense challenge to the church insofar as it seeks to remain faithful to Scripture. But it is not an isolated ethical problem. It is just one element--albeit a very important one--in the much broader, long-term overhaul and reorientation of Western culture after the collapse of the Christian consensus. The forces of history that are driving this transformation, however, have also alerted us to the historical perspectives that constrained biblical thought.Andrew Perriman suggests that Paul's argument about same-sex behavior, perhaps more clearly than any other issue, highlights the narrative shape of the mission of the early church in the Greek world. By the same token, we must ask how that storyline has been refracted across the boundary of modernity, and how it now shapes the mission of the church as it adapts to its marginalized position in an aggressively secular world.

  • Kurztext
    • This book is an exercise in a thoroughgoing narrative theology. The social and legal validation of same-sex relationships in the West over the last two decades has presented an immense challenge to the church insofar as it seeks to remain faithful to Scripture. But it is not an isolated ethical problem. It is just one element--albeit a very important one--in the much broader, long-term overhaul and reorientation of Western culture after the collapse of the Christian consensus. The forces of history that are driving this transformation, however, have also alerted us to the historical perspectives that constrained biblical thought. Andrew Perriman suggests that Paul's argument about same-sex behavior, perhaps more clearly than any other issue, highlights the narrative shape of the mission of the early church in the Greek world. By the same token, we must ask how that storyline has been refracted across the boundary of modernity, and how it now shapes the mission of the church as it adapts to its marginalized position in an aggressively secular world.

  • Autorenportrait
    • Andrew Perriman lives in London, England. He has a handful of books to his name, including<i>Speaking of Women: Interpreting Paul</i> and<i>The Future of the People of God: Reading Romans Before and After Western Christendom</i>. He blogs regularly on the exegetical and missional benefits of a narrative-historical reading of Scripture at www.postost.net. He is an Associate Research Fellow of the London School of Theology.<br>
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