The Word of the Lord Grows looks at the New Testament writings with an eye on their historical context. He reveals how the events and controversies surrounding the early Christians helped shape the message of the New Testament. Grows discusses biblical scholarship and authorship and proposes present-day applications of biblical texts.
In the Logos edition of The Word of the Lord Grows, you get easy access to Scripture texts and to a wealth of other resources in your digital library. Hovering over Scripture references links you instantly to the verse you’re looking for, and with Passage Guides, Word Studies, and a wealth of other tools from Logos, you can delve into God’s Word like never before!
“To surrender the Old Testament is the first step toward misunderstanding, perverting, and so losing the Gospel of the New Testament.” (Page 52)
“The word of God is God in action; for God is not a lecturer but the God who is ‘working still,’ as Jesus said of His Father, and of Himself the Son (John 5:17). God is the Lord of all history, reveals Himself by His mighty acts in history, and the word which He gives His prophets to utter interprets those acts and makes them an enduring force in the world. His word and His work are so closely connected that both the Old Testament and the New Testament speak of God’s great acts simply as the activity of His word.” (Page 1)
“Our easy age, which discusses heresy with ecumenical calm over tea cups, can learn of this letter the terrible seriousness with which the all-inclusive Gospel of grace excludes all movements and all men who seek to qualify its grace.” (Page 62)
“All of the theories must, in view of the paucity of the evidence, remain highly speculative” (Page 217)
“The letter is therefore basically just what its author calls it, a ‘word of exhortation’ (Heb. 13:22), an appeal to ‘hold fast the confession … without wavering’ (Heb. 10:23; cf. 10:38; 3:14).” (Page 239)
1 rating
Glenn Crouch
8/23/2013