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Life in the Son
Paperback
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The New Testament writers use spatial language and imagery to portray our relationship with God, speaking both about God or Christ in us and us in them. Believers are also described as possessing and participating in divine qualities such as life and glory. Both aspects are prominent in John's Gospel and letters. However, outside the Pauline writings, union with Christ has hardly been addressed in New Testament scholarship. Clive Bowsher seeks to redress this balance in his New Studies in Biblical Theology volume Life in the Son.
In John's Gospel, the oneness of the Father and Son is described as the Father and Son being "in one another." Clive Bowsher's study shows that union with Christ in John's Gospel and letters is the in-one-another relationship of believers with the Father and Son by the Spirit—the intimate, loving, relational participation of the believer and God, each in the life, affections, ways, and work of the other. Insightful and accessible, Bowsher's study also explores connections with the shape of sonship, covenant and the life of the age to come. This volume fills a significant gap in the literature and promises to be a blessing to pastors, preachers, and scholars alike.
Addressing key issues in biblical theology, the works comprising New Studies in Biblical Theology are creative attempts to help Christians better understand their Bibles. The NSBT series is edited by D. A. Carson, aiming to simultaneously instruct and to edify, to interact with current scholarship and to point the way ahead.
Series preface
Author’s preface
Introduction: Johannine oneness and participation with Christ
1. ‘In Christ’ in John: setting the scene
2. Oneness, participation and life in the Fourth Gospel
3. Oneness, participation and life in the Johannine epistles
4. Oneness and participation with Christ in the Johannine Gospel and epistles: a synthesis so far
5. Participation in the journey of Jesus
6. Oneness and participation with the Son in the Johannine Gospel and epistles
7. In-one-anotherness with Christ: the eschatological culmination of covenant
8. In conclusion: Johannine oneness and participation with Christ
Appendix 1: Pauline union with Christ
Appendix 2: A preliminary lookat oneness and participation with Christ in Revelation
Appendix 3: An analysis of the Greek discourse of John 14:15-24
Appendix 4: Hortatory-imperatival use of the third-person indicative in New Testament Greek outside 1 John
Bibliography
Index of authors
Index of Scripture references