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Challenge of Jesus: Rediscovering Who Jesus Was and Is (Unabridged)
 
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Challenge of Jesus: Rediscovering Who Jesus Was and Is (Unabridged) [Audio Download]

by N. T. Wright (Author), Simon Vance (Narrator)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Audio Download
  • Listening Length: 6 hours and 56 minutes
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: christianaudio.com
  • Audible Release Date: 11 Feb 2009
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B002SQ52D4
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
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Product Description

Today a renewed and vigorous scholarly quest for the historical Jesus is underway. In the midst of well publicized and controversial books on Jesus, N. T. Wright's lectures and writings have been widely recognized for providing a fresh, provocative and historically credible portrait.

The Challenge of Jesus poses a double-edged challenge: to grow in our understanding of the historical Jesus within the Palestinian world of the first century, and to follow Jesus more faithfully into the postmodern world of the 21st century.

©2000 N.T. Wright; (P)2009 christianaudio.com

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
81 of 86 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
The eschatological debate between liberal and conservative scholars is so deeply entrenched, so polarised, so emotionally charged that any reconciliation seems unlikely - at least this side of the Parousia! But what would happen if a theologian with impeccable academic credentials consciously set out to transcend these factions? The chances are, of course, that such an author would get shot at from both sides, even as both sides tried to claim him as an albeit wayward member of their own camp. And that is rather what is happening to N. T. ("Tom") Wright, Canon Theologian of Westminster Abbey.

Wright has recently completed the second volume of a projected six-volume re-assessment of Christ's teaching and its relationship to the early Christian Church entitled "Christian Origins and the Question of God". In the shorter book reviewed here, "The Challenge of Jesus", Wright has produced a fascinating introductory overview of his thesis that will appeal to the general reader without underselling the author's status as one of the leading British theologians of his generation.

Wright's starting point is the familiar and widely accepted truth that we must understand how Jesus and his contemporaries understood his teaching and his actions before we can apply them to our own setting. But Wright goes a stage further: Even with a sound understanding of this principle, the way the Church has traditionally acted out its mission does not do justice to the uniqueness and particularity of Jesus' works. Individual emulation of Jesus' actions and the lifestyle application of popular interpretations of his teaching, however culturally adjusted, are inadequate. In short we are not just people (plural) but the People (singular) of God, and Wright's conclusion is no less than that the Church must be to the World what Jesus was to Israel.

That does not sound anything like as exciting or challenging at first sight as it will be once you have digested Wright's reasoning. He shows with unerring skill, both as historian and exegete, how Jesus subverted traditional Jewish symbolism and messianic expectations to supplant the Temple with his own person and position his own death as the central historical event in a new Exodus. In doing so, Wright brings together tools that will be familiar to both liberals and conservatives, and he is remarkably successful in making two important connections: Firstly, he shows in geopolitically and psychologically credible terms the connection between Jesus' actions and his death sentence. Secondly and even more strikingly, Wright shows in historically and spiritually credible terms the connection between the Jesus who walked and talked and the Christ of the Church's kerygmatic literature. The value of these achievements in a book that concurrently stresses the historic centrality of the physical death and resurrection (for which read literal re-embodiment) of Jesus Christ cannot be over-stated.

That is not to say that the book is without flaws, and one of these is particularly serious, namely inadequate handling of the Atonement. Nowhere in the book's climactic chapter, 'The Challenge of Easter' does Wright come close to explaining how Jesus' death can be the means of salvation or even transference of guilt. In fairness to the author, it is clear from passing comments elsewhere in the book that he vehemently disowns the view that Calvary was no more than an example to the infant church of the cross-bearing path it would have to follow. Nevertheless, he does not elaborate this conviction in the parts of the book where it matters most, and readers could be excused for inferring from the chapter under discussion that Jesus' painful death was little more than an inconvenient bridge he had to cross to get to his glorious resurrection.

The under-emphasis of substitutionary atonement was for me at least the most serious of several flaws including a rather too guarded analysis by the author of exactly what he means when he speaks of Christ's divinity, and in a lesser work these might have been fatal. But it really is too much to expect that any one book but the Bible itself can do justice to every strand of Christian truth. Wright's viewpoint really does represent a broader-based homage to the historical truth of the New Testament than anything else I can bring to mind. Moreover he is not just a theoretician, and in the last two chapters of the book he applies his exegesis, developing with ruthless logic the ethical challenge of an inaugurated but unfinished eschatalogical Kingdom of God. The challenge to our preconceptions, prejudices and comfort zones is deeply unsettling and yet fundamentally uplifting.

In summary, almost every one with an opinion of his or her own will find something in Wright's thesis to disagree with, but most readers of whatever persuasion should find his work challenging and rewarding. This concise introduction to the larger project is engagingly readable but full of fresh and striking insights that will stimulate both the heart and the brain. It is one of the most exciting Christian books I have read, and I would recommend it to anyone who seriously wants to get to the heart of what Jesus and his contemporaries will have understood by the "Kingdom of God".

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
I found this an excellent book. Whilst explicitly written from a faith perspective, I would recommend this to any reader interested in Jesus as an historic person. It engages the intellect but in a clear and economical form. I had always struggled to link aspects of the early church with the Gospel narrative. Tom Wright's lucid explanation of what Jesus said about himself - and more importantly, what he did - clarifies the continuity. It roots Jesus in his culture and makes it easier to relate to Jesus as a man. At the same time it helped me to grasp new aspects of the incarnation. Vitally, Tom wright also calls for individual and corporate response to these understandings.
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21 of 29 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
A look at the message and mission of the historical person Jesus Christ. I have to recomend this book to everyone serious about their commitment to be a follower of Jesus. The book is well written and very accessable.
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