Difference between revisions of "Proclaiming the Messiah: The Life and Letters of Paul of Tarsus, Envoy to the Nations (1997 Schonfield), book"
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==Abstract== | ==Abstract== | ||
In this colorful and imaginative biographical work on Paul, completed in 1988 and published posthumously, Schonfield depicted in a semi-novelistic fashion the life of Paul from his youth to his fatal end in Rome. | In this colorful and imaginative biographical work on Paul, completed in 1988 and published posthumously, Schonfield depicted in a semi-novelistic fashion the life of Paul from his youth to his fatal end in Rome. Schonfield avoided focusing on the theological ideas of Paul and preferred to look at the social, political, and psychological elements which shaped the complex personality of the apostle to the Gentiles. Schonfield also provided his own translation of the Pauline letters which he rearranged according to a reconstructed chronological order.-- '''Isaac W. Oliver''' | ||
==Editions and translations== | ==Editions and translations== | ||
Published in London [England]: Open Gates Press, 1997. | Published in London [England]: Open Gates Press, 1997. |
Revision as of 14:17, 4 February 2010
Proclaiming the Messiah: The Life and Letters of Paul of Tarsus Envoy to the Nations (1997) is a book by Hugh J. Schonfield.
Abstract
In this colorful and imaginative biographical work on Paul, completed in 1988 and published posthumously, Schonfield depicted in a semi-novelistic fashion the life of Paul from his youth to his fatal end in Rome. Schonfield avoided focusing on the theological ideas of Paul and preferred to look at the social, political, and psychological elements which shaped the complex personality of the apostle to the Gentiles. Schonfield also provided his own translation of the Pauline letters which he rearranged according to a reconstructed chronological order.-- Isaac W. Oliver
Editions and translations
Published in London [England]: Open Gates Press, 1997.