1 minute read

The Fire and the Cloud

Next Article
Tommy Bowman

Tommy Bowman

A Biblical Christology

Chris E. W. Green

Advertisement

The Fire and the Cloud is a non-supersessionist biblical Christology developed from close readings of Israel’s Scriptures. In this work, the second in a trilogy that began with All Things Beautiful: An Aesthetic Christology, Chris E. W. Green tracks the recurrent and interwoven themes of exile, journey, and return across the canonical order, beginning with the story of Cain’s exile and ending with the homecoming of Naomi and Ruth. He examines crucial passages and their significance in later Jewish and Christian interpretations, reckoning honestly with the history of Christian anti-Jewishness and reminding us of the good news that the nations are being grafted into the people of God.

Beginning to end, Green’s figural—indeed, mystical—Christology lays itself open to the mysterious and transformative power of imaginative exegesis, seeking both to honor Israel’s unique, ongoing vocation as the people of God and to honor the church’s faith in and witness to Jesus, striving not to impose a dead image of him onto the ancient texts but to recognize his living likeness in their Spirit-inspired movements.

Green believes such interpretation is necessary and necessarily difficult, requiring us to read both with and against the grain of our convictions and commitments, expecting and allowing the biblical texts to teach us what we did not know we needed to learn differently. This is so, he argues, because a biblical Christology, if it is to be true to its purposes, must be capable of surprising us as the living word of the living Christ— confronting us in judgment, decentering us in praise, and sweeping us up into the covenant-making work of the Spirit for the sake of the nations.

CHRIS E. W. GREEN is Professor of Public Theology at Southeastern University.

CONTENTS

Introduction

Part I

1 Exile

2 Pilgrimage

3 Settlement

Part II

4 Exodus

5 Wandering

6 Occupation

Part III

7 Exile as Exodus

8 Settlement as Occupation

9 Pilgrimage as Homecoming

Conclusion

STEVEN EDWARD HARRIS is Pastor of Discipleship at Elim Church Saskatoon and Adjunct Professor of Theology at Horizon College and Seminary.

Contents

Acknowledgments

Abbreviations

Introduction

1 Death, the Last Enemy

2 Prefigurative Resurrections in 1–2 Kings and the Gospels

3 The Resurrection of the Lord Jesus

4 Post-figurative Resurrections in Acts and Beyond

5 The Holy Spirit and Present Spiritual Resurrection

6 Awaiting the Return of Christ

7 Resurrection as Configuration to Christ

8 Constraining Speculation by the Figure of Christ

9 The Same Body or Another Body?

10 Resurrection as/and Judgment

11 Ascension as Christian Destiny

12 Resurrection as (New) Creation

Conclusion: Resurrection, the End of Scripture, and Theology

This article is from: