Digital Logos Edition
A collection of essays presented during the Consultation on Paul’s Letter to the Romans at four annual meetings of the Evangelical Theological Society (2018, 2019, 2021, 2022).
This volume features contributions from top evangelical Pauline scholars, addresses contested theological matters in the letter to the Romans, and can serve as a textbook.
Each of the four editors has written a recent major commentary on Romans (Moo, NICNT; Schnabel, HTA; Schreiner, BECNT; Thielman, ZECNT). Contributors include the editors, along with Robert Yarbrough, Mark Seifrid, Robert Gagnon, Patrick Schreiner, Christopher Bruno, Brian Rosner, Kevin McFadden, Benjamin Gladd, Charles Quarles, Ben Dunson, Kyle Wells, Michael Bird, Joshua Greever, Benjamin Merkle, Ardel Caneday, Sigurd Grindheim, A. Andrew Das, Jeffrey Weima, Mateus de Campos, and M. Sydney Park.
This collection of essays on the greatest letter ever written is thought provoking and academically responsible. That is what we would expect since the editors are expert exegetes who have authored outstanding commentaries on Romans
—Andy Naselli, Associate Professor of Systematic Theology and New Testament, Bethlehem College and Seminary
Designed to serve as a textbook on Romans, this volume provides far more than that genre would suggest. Its ‘theological essays’ effectively furnish an accessible commentary to most of the Epistle, together with well-informed treatments of topics of relevance—and, in some cases, of controversy— within the contemporary church. Combining depth with accessibility, the book will interest both scholars and non-scholars, those in ministry and lay readers alike
—Stephen Westerholm, Professor Emeritus of Early Christianity, McMaster University
It is not often we see twenty-four New Testament scholars offering fresh appraisals of significant issues related to the interpretation of Romans. I am impressed by the quality of all the contributions to this volume, which in many cases offer new, well-considered approaches to the major sections of the letter, including matters of interpretation that have long occupied the minds of scholars. The book will, in my opinion, greatly benefit students and interpreters of Romans
—Colin G. Kruse, Emeritus Scholar, Melbourne School of Theology
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