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In this bold volume, George van Kooten reevaluates the dating of the Gospels, situates them anew in their first-century context, and shows why their message still resonates today.
In Reverberations of Good News, George van Kooten brings the Gospels to life by situating them in the vibrant, complicated world of the first century. Far from being abstract religious writings, the Gospels are presented here as urgent responses to the real pressures of Roman occupation, Jewish identity, and Greek thought.
Van Kooten shows how each Gospel--Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John--was crafted for specific audiences facing distinct challenges, whether confronting imperial power, reimagining ancient traditions, or engaging philosophical questions. As part of this project, van Kooten argues that the Gospel of John may actually be the earliest Gospel, not the latest. In so doing, he turns conventional wisdom on its head and opens up new ways of understanding Christianity's origins.
By illuminating what the Gospels meant to first-century audiences, Reverberations of Good News invites readers to reflect more deeply on what the narratives mean today. Pastors preparing sermons, students seeking to understand the Bible's cultural and historical context, and anyone curious about Christianity's foundational narratives will come away with new insight into why the story of Jesus was--and continues to be--good news.
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