The Incarnation of the Lord (1902 Briggs), book
The Incarnation of the Lord (1902) is a book by Charles A. Briggs.
Abstract
Edwin Briggs here undertakes a close exegetical treatment of Phillipians 2:5-11; his principle objective is to illumine how this excerpt from the Apostle Paul proves and illustrates the doctrine of the incarnation. As can be seen in the outline listed below, Brigg's strategy is to move slowly word by word, line by line, and verse by verse through the entire pericope in order to demonstrate how and why the Apostle Paul consciously employed certain words and turns of phrase to show his readers that Jesus was both fully divine and fully human and how in the process of Jesus becoming flesh, Jesus did not relinquish or set aside his divine nature in any way. Perhaps the most interesting aspect of Brigg's monograph is that he alerts the readers to the extensive and on-going scholarly debate that was concurrently happening shortly before and during the time of his writing regarding this passage. Several scholars, it seems, including Luther and Calvin during the Protestant Reformation, and contemporaneous German scholars to his day, argued that this text said much more about Jesus as a man than Jesus as God. In response, Briggs writes to refute these suspicions and employs Phillipians 2:5-11 to defend orthodox articulations of the doctrine of the Incarnation. ~Deborah Forger
Editions and translations
Published in New York, NY: Charles Scribner's, 1902.
Contents
"A series of sermons tracing the unfolding of the doctrine of the incarnation in the New Testament."
External links
- [ Google Books]