Home
בוא ותראה έλα να δεις Come and See: A Verse Interpretation of the Gospel of John
Barnes and Noble
בוא ותראה έλα να δεις Come and See: A Verse Interpretation of the Gospel of John
Current price: $22.00
Barnes and Noble
בוא ותראה έλα να δεις Come and See: A Verse Interpretation of the Gospel of John
Current price: $22.00
Size: OS
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
This book is a verse interpretation of the Gospel of John. The Gospel of John numbers among the most important and influential texts in all of human history. With its emphasis on the word and on symbolic thought, together with the cohesiveness of its structure-its many dialogues and monologues-John lends itself to a presentation in verse, specifically the lyric form that predominates English poetry today. This verse interpretation presents John's Gospel in an aesthetically harmonious lyric form. It is an experiment, not an exercise in scholarship. Perhaps in some defiance to poetic values, these lyrics stand as unadorned as possible, so that each acuminated image and phrase intends, as did the original Greek, to pierce the thin veil between the human and the divine, and to allow the Gospel's symbols and metaphors, so essential to poetic discourse, to stand before us transparent as glass.
Arguably, it is the Gospel most foundational to Christian theology. The secondary literature that surrounds it is immense, its every word examined in exacting detail, from many angles and within many different contexts. The words of John are keys meant to be played by the soul. They are essential ingredients for the development and refinement of the Everlasting Spirit.
Though an overall consensus has been reached with regards to both the structure and message of John's Gospel, several controversies remain, mainly with regards to its authorship. For most of its history, these concerns were of considerably less importance to John's audience, which was comprised primarily of the clergy and the lay community. Since at least the third century CE, the author of the Gospel was believed to be John the Apostle, one of the Twelve Apostles of Jesus, the son of Zebedee and brother of James the Apostle, identified within the text-though unnamed-as "the Beloved Disciple." The Gospel was thought to have been composed in the final decades of the first century after the destruction of the Temple of Jerusalem in 70 CE, after which John, in his old age, lived in exile among a community of followers somewhere in Greece; like all the books of the New Testament, John was written in Greek and, furthermore, its content seems intended for a Greek audience. The Gospel of John, the three epistles attributed to John, and the Book of Revelation make up the entirety of what has come to be known as Johannine literature.
Arguably, it is the Gospel most foundational to Christian theology. The secondary literature that surrounds it is immense, its every word examined in exacting detail, from many angles and within many different contexts. The words of John are keys meant to be played by the soul. They are essential ingredients for the development and refinement of the Everlasting Spirit.
Though an overall consensus has been reached with regards to both the structure and message of John's Gospel, several controversies remain, mainly with regards to its authorship. For most of its history, these concerns were of considerably less importance to John's audience, which was comprised primarily of the clergy and the lay community. Since at least the third century CE, the author of the Gospel was believed to be John the Apostle, one of the Twelve Apostles of Jesus, the son of Zebedee and brother of James the Apostle, identified within the text-though unnamed-as "the Beloved Disciple." The Gospel was thought to have been composed in the final decades of the first century after the destruction of the Temple of Jerusalem in 70 CE, after which John, in his old age, lived in exile among a community of followers somewhere in Greece; like all the books of the New Testament, John was written in Greek and, furthermore, its content seems intended for a Greek audience. The Gospel of John, the three epistles attributed to John, and the Book of Revelation make up the entirety of what has come to be known as Johannine literature.