000 02163nam a2200361 a 4500
005 20260119070428.0
008 2021-12-21 16:34:13
020 _a0800626796
041 _a0 eng
082 _a225.6
082 _bW947-N63
100 _aWright, N. T.
100 _d(1948-...)
100 _eAuthor
245 _aThe Resurrection of the Son of God
245 _bChristian Origins and the Question of God
245 _cN. T. Wright (Nicolas Thomas Wright)
245 _nvol.3
260 _aU.S.A
260 _bFortress
260 _c2003
300 _a817tr.
300 _bpaperback, illustrations
300 _c24cm
490 _aChristian Origins and the Question of God, vol 3
520 _aWhy did Christianity begin, and why did it take the shape it did? To answer this question - which any historian must face - renowned New Testament scholar N. T. Wright focuses on the key question: what precisely happened at Easter? What did the early Christians mean when they said that Jesus of Nazareth had been raised from the dead? What can be said today about this belief? This book, third in Wright's series Christian Origins and the Question of God, sketches a map of ancient beliefs about life after death, in both the Greco-Roman and Jewish worlds. It then highlights the fact that the early Christians' belief about the afterlife belonged firmly on the Jewish spectrum, while introducing several new mutations and sharper definitions. This, together with other features of early Christianity, forces the historian to read the Easter narratives in the gospels, not simply as late rationalizations of early Christian spirituality, but as accounts of two actual events: the empty tomb of Jesus and his `appearances.` How do we explain these phenomena? The early Christians' answer was that Jesus had indeed been bodily raised from the dead
650 _aJesus Christ
650 _aJesus Christ -- Resurrection
650 _aResurrection of Jesus Christ
856 4 _uhttps://data.thuviencodoc.org/books/ImageCover/2021/12/21/_376716724_140.jpg
_yCover Image
911 _aPhạm Nguyễn Hồng Như
957 _a211001 TKH, 231010 TKH
999 _c6198
_d6198