Psalms of Christ. Daniel H. Fletcher
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Название: Psalms of Christ

Автор: Daniel H. Fletcher

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Религия: прочее

Серия:

isbn: 9781532650819

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СКАЧАТЬ settled on was “Christological Preaching from Psalms.” Therefore, I write this book as a personal and passionate exploration of two topics close to my heart: christological interpretation of the OT and Psalms. To be sure, this is not the first book to connect NT Christology with Psalms, nor is it the first to apply a christological interpretation to the OT generally. This book shares a general outlook of interpreting Psalms christologically with Richard Belcher’s The Messiah and the Psalms. Belcher’s thesis is that all the psalms have a relationship to Christ, not just the traditional messianic psalms.4 He examines some psalms that are quoted in the NT and some that are not. A distinguishing feature of my work is that none of the psalms studied here are quoted in the NT; for that matter, there is only minute overlap between the psalms covered in the two books (excluding Pss 46, 88, 137). The present book also converges with Patrick Reardon’s Christ in the Psalms, which offers short summaries of the historical setting of each psalm (in the LXX) followed by brief christological reflections. Reardon’s book is not research based per se, whereas the current book offers documentation of the historical analysis as it explores the ancient setting of each psalm, as well as its anticipation of NT Christology. Sidney Greidanus’s Preaching Christ From Psalms was published during the writing of the present work. As is the case with Belcher, there is some overlap in the psalms treated (e.g., Pss 1, 23, 29, 100); yet nearly half of the psalms in Greidanus’s book are quoted in the NT in some messianic sense (e.g., Pss 2, 8, 22). Therefore, his work does not have a sustained focus on non-messianic psalms. Additionally, his lectionary approach is very different from the present work. Greidanus’s book is geared toward the academic discipline of practical theology (i.e., preaching and worship), while the current one is geared more toward biblical theology (i.e., the organic unity of the OT and NT), understanding that these are not mutually exclusive, at least not ideally.5 In spite of the differences between these three books and the current one, they have proved indispensable for my work.