Review:
«For over a century the intellectually lazy and spiritually timid have sought to discredit the Higher Criticism of Wellhausen, Strauss, and Baur as a mere exercise in Hegelian philosophy, forced like a cookie cutter onto the biblical texts. What nonsense! But what might we learn if we actually did apply Hegelian insights to the New Testament? Here's our chance to find out, as we read the dynamically new approach of Marshell Carl Bradley. Matthew will never look the same again!» (Robert Price, Jesus Seminar Fellow and Author of 'Deconstructing Jesus')
«Whatever one may think of Hegel's influence in biblical scholarship, not all of it has been superficial or corrosive of traditional forms of faith and piety. Marshell Carl Bradley's magisterial linguistic-semiological commentary is one instance in which that influence has inspired a reading of Matthew meticulously respectful of the Gospel's internal integrity. Exploding with insights, Bradley's analysis moves with ease among linguistic, philosophical, and theological levels. Like a consummate grammarian, Bradley discloses for the first time Matthew's remarkably intricate strategy, leaving his readers wondering how they ever missed so much.» (Philip Blosser, Professor of Philosophy and Assistant Director of the Annual Aquinas-Luther Conference, Lenoir-Rhyne College, Hickory, North Carolina)
About the Author:
The Author: Marshell Carl Bradley has a Ph.D. in philosophy and is currently Associate Professor of Philosophy at Sam Houston State University in Texas. He is widely published in international journals in philosophy, theology, and literature, and he is the author of a full-length play, 'The Brothers Booth'.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.