A Survey of the New Testament
Date
2012-02-12
Authors
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Journal ISSN
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Publisher
Zondervan
Abstract
A textbook surveying the New Testament should bring together the
most salient items from New Testament background, technical intro
duction, and commentary. Nearly all surveys of the New Testament
suffer, however, from a deficiency of comments on the biblical text. As
a result, study of the survey textbook often nudges out a reading of the
primary and most important text, the New Testament itself.
Reading the New Testament Itself
Since many beginning students have never read the New Testament sys
tematically or thoroughly, if at all, the present survey prompts them to
read it in its entirety, passage by passage, and carries on a dialogue with
each passage in the form of brief commentary. By tracing the flow of
thought from passage to passage, students will gain a sense of narratival
and logical progression. Thus it has proved possible to move at least some
of the background material concerning intertestamental history, Judaism,
and other matters — which seem tortuous to many students — from the
first part of the book to later parts, where such material elucidates the bib
lical text directly. This procedure reduces the discouragingly long intro
duction to the typical academic course in New Testament survey, better
enables students to see how background material helps interpret the text,
and above all keeps the textbook from supplanting the New Testament.