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Beloved But Known

Lecture

Ben Witherington

Ben Witherington III is Amos Professor of New Testament for Doctoral Studies at Asbury Theological Seminary and serves on the doctoral faculty at University of St Andrews. A graduate of University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, he earned his M.Div. from Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary and Ph.D. from Durham University. He is a leading evangelical scholar and an elected member of Studiorum Novi Testamenti Societas. (SNTS).

Panel

What Can We Learn from the Early Church?

The panel discusses lessons for the life of the early church.

About the Panelists

Ben Witherington III is the Amos Professor of New Testament for Doctoral Studies a Asbury Theological Seminary and Doctoral Faculty at the University of St Andrews.

Todd Still is the DeLancey Dean and Hinson Professor at Baylor University, Truett Seminary.

Steve Walton is the Senior Research Fellow in New Testament at  Trinity College in Bristol and the Senior Research Fellow at Kirby Laing Centre in Cambridge.

Additional Resources

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1:28
The Mission of God in the Gospel of John
Ft. N.T. Wright

ohn frames his gospel with deliberate echoes of the creation story in Genesis, all the way from ‘in the beginning’ at the very start to the ‘new Eden’ themes in chapter 20. In chapter 1 the focus is on Jesus as the ‘Word made Flesh’, uniquely revealing the glory of God to the world, but in chapter 20 the focus is on the disciples, who are equipped with the Spirit to be, for the world, what Jesus was for Israel (‘As the Father sent me, so I send you’). Picking up from the earlier hints about the Spirit in chapters 7 and 14-16, we glimpse the task of the Church in terms of the rivers of living water (ch. 7) and the holding of the world to account (ch 16). John 20 thus shows how Jesus’ resurrection and ascension, and the gift of his Spirit, launch God’s mission of new creation.

1:22
C.S. Lewis and the Problem of Pain
Ft. Amy Orr-Ewing

C.S. Lewis has had a phenomenal impact on the reception of the Christian faith beyond his own lifetime. His writing on the Problem of Pain has been particularly meaningful for people struggling to reconcile a loving God with this pain filled world. In this session we will explore Lewis’ approach to suffering and ask what we can learn from it today and consider how to develop our own responses to the problem of evil and suffering that connect with the cultural moment we find ourselves in.

1:10
The Gospels and the Anti-Slavery Movement
Ft. Esau McCaulley

During the 19th-century, there was extensive theological and biblical debate around the issue of slavery in North America. The scholarly consensus seems to suggest that the pro-slavery faction had the better biblical argument, but the pro-abolitionist side had the better moral argument. In addition, many contend that abolitionists searched frantically and often in vain for biblical support for abolition, especially in the gospels. Dr. McCaulley challenges that consensus by focusing on the use of the Jesus tradition in the slavery and abolitionist debates by demonstrating that abolitionists made extensive use of the Jesus tradition in their reasoning and were much more confident in their position than later scholars and clergy recognize.

1:10
The Resurrection of Jesus: The Minimal Facts Approach
Ft. Gary Habermas

In this lecture, Gary Habermas will explore his approach to analyzing ancient sources to determine “what really happened.” He argues that even agnostics, atheists, and skeptics must acknowledge certain facts. Dr. Habermas identifies six historical facts that support the claim that the bodily resurrection of Jesus offers the most compelling explanation. He contends that alternative interpretations do not account for the evidence as effectively.

1:11
Tragic Lament
Ft. Frederico Villanueava

For some time now there have been calls for the recovery of lament. Yet despite these, there appears to be a continuing lack of appreciation for the “costly loss of lament.” In this lecture, Dr. Villanueva will make the case that one of the reasons for the continuing loss of lament is due to a limited vision of worship, which only sees a movement to praise. To recover lament, we need a more encompassing vision of worship itself, one which sees a movement not only from lament to praise but also the opposite movement from praise to lament.

1:04
Hazael, An Aramean Action-Hero, Scourge of the Hebrew Kingdoms
Ft. Lawson Younger

Who was Hazael? The book of Kings gives the biblical perspective on this famous king of Aram-Damascus. Recent archaeological and ancient Near Eastern evidence provides additional insights. In this lecture, Dr. Younger, following a general historical outline, will integrate the evidence and investigate Hazael from an Aramean perspective in order to paint a more complete picture of this charismatic — yet enigmatic — figure, whom, according to the Hebrew Bible, God used for his purposes.

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