The Earliest Christian Confessions


Book Description

In this essay, Dr. Cullmann sets himself to answer these questions: •Why did Christians need to have, besides Scripture, and apostolic formula to summarise the faith they professed? •What circumstances brought this necessity about? •What is the composition of the first formulas, and how did they develop in the earliest times? •What is the essential content of the Christian faith according to the earliest formulas?










Earliest Christian confessions


Book Description

Preliminary Material /Vernon H. Neufeld -- The Literature and the Problem /Vernon H. Neufeld -- The Nature of the Homologia /Vernon H. Neufeld -- The Homologia and Judaism /Vernon H. Neufeld -- The Homologia in the Letters of Paul /Vernon H. Neufeld -- The Homologia in the Gospel and Letters of John /Vernon H. Neufeld -- The Homologia in the Synoptic Gospels and Acts /Vernon H. Neufeld -- The Homologia in Other Books of the New Testament /Vernon H. Neufeld -- The Primitive Christian Homologia /Vernon H. Neufeld -- Bibliography /Vernon H. Neufeld -- Index of Passages /Vernon H. Neufeld -- New Testament Tools and Studies.




Confessions of a Caffeinated Christian


Book Description

Fischer challenges readers to take big steps in their faith and be like strong, caffeinated coffee rather than weak, powerless decaf. By taking these steps, the author promises, readers will begin to enjoy a deeper, more dynamic faith in Jesus.




The Story of Creeds and Confessions


Book Description

Creeds and confessions throughout Christian history provide a unique vantage point from which to study the Christian faith. To this end, Donald Fairbairn and Ryan Reeves construct a story that captures both the central importance of creeds and confessions over the centuries and their unrealized potential to introduce readers to the overall sweep of church history. The book features texts of classic creeds and confessions as well as informational sidebars.







New Wine Into Fresh Wineskins


Book Description

Throughout the centuries Christians have sought to understand better the nature of the earliest features of the gospel message, for in that understanding lies the opportunity to make relevant the gospel's power to effect change" in other words, to put new wine into fresh wineskins. Veteran New Testament scholar Richard Longenecker explains how early Christians "contextualized" the gospel message for their hearers just as Christians do today. Specifically, "New Wine into Fresh Wineskins" focuses on the relationships among the early Christian confessions in the letters of Paul and the Gospels and looks at how the New Testament writers contextualized these confessions for their own hearers. The volume also reflects on how Christian confessions are adapted for later cultures and contexts. For example, the same gospel message both tells of the past and promises a future, it both encourages and admonishes, and it both reveals and conceals the mysteries of God. With careful analysis and appreciation for how early Christians understood Jesus in a variety of situations, Longenecker challenges readers with the always relevant truth of the gospel.




Belgic Confession


Book Description




Christian Confessions


Book Description

Ted Campbell examines, in a comparative framework, the historic teachings of the four major Christian traditions that have shaped our theological heritage - Eastern Orthodoxy, Roman Catholicism. Reformation and Union churches, and Evangelical and Free churches. He provides an extensive overview of each tradition's particular beliefs on religious authority, God and Christ, human nature and salvation, and church, ministry, and the sacraments. He concludes by considering whether a definable core of Christian teachings cuts across denominational and confessional boundaries.