Reddit Reddit reviews The King Jesus Gospel: The Original Good News Revisited

We found 5 Reddit comments about The King Jesus Gospel: The Original Good News Revisited. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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The King Jesus Gospel: The Original Good News Revisited
Zondervan
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5 Reddit comments about The King Jesus Gospel: The Original Good News Revisited:

u/EarBucket · 11 pointsr/Christianity

Three books I recommend highly:

Thom Stark's The Human Faces of God. If you only read one book about the Bible before giving up on it, please make sure it's this one.

Scot McKnight's The King Jesus Gospel does a great job of laying out the ways in which the story the Bible is trying to tell has been distorted and misunderstood by a focus on personal salvation.

N.T. Wright's How God Became King makes a similar case, but fleshes it out from a more scholarly perspective and addresses the political implications of the gospel.

u/silouan · 10 pointsr/Catacombs

Christ and the Apostles called it "the Gospel."

Modern Evangelicalism has often mixed up the Gospel with a message about individually "getting saved." But if you look at every time the Gospel is actually preached in the New Testament, it boils down to "Israel's history has reached its climax with the coming of its King."

If you're an old-school Christian (Orthodox, Catholic, traditional Anglican) then Scot McKnight's excellent The King Jesus Gospel isn't any big surprise. But for modern Evangelicals it may be an angle they've never heard before - and it resolves the conflict between what Christ actually teaches in the four Gospels, and what gets preached today and called "the Gospel."

u/AmoDman · 3 pointsr/Christianity

You asked why, not for a deductive argument proving the truth of our answers.


If you have intellectual worries about God, feel free to browse the various categories of responses to questions concerning His existence.


If you have doubts about Jesus, only you can answer those for yourself. We believe that He's divine and approaches us all relationally. Read a Gospel or two (John and Mark are my favorites). Get to know the story and seriously ask yourself if this Christ person, as character, speaks to you in any way.


NT Wright is a pretty well regarded orthodox Christian scholar by both Christians and Non-Christians, so you may want to read some of his work if you have questions to address about the truth of this character. Who Was Jesus? and Simply Jesus may help you.


If you find any of that compelling and wish to dig into some Christian theology of Jesus, a couple excellent books which portray my personal take fairly well are King Jesus Gospel and Start Here.

And, of course, if you wish merely to approach the idea of Christianity in general, C.S. Lewis famously asserted many fundamentals in his classic Mere Christianity.


If you want me to assert the truth Christianity by disproving all other religions, I will not. I believe that religion is, fundamentally, a search for the divine or God. If divine truth exists, I would expect it to be echoed throughout the mythic language of all attempts to know Him (religions). Conversely, I assert the goodness and truth of Jesus Christ, who I see as central, and anything else that matters falls naturally into place.

u/c3wifjah · 2 pointsr/Christianity

short answer: The gospel is the story of Jesus as he answers the story of the Hebrews.

long answer: you should definitely read The King Jesus Gospel by Scot McKnight.

u/Last-Socratic · 1 pointr/TrueChristian

To get a biblical perspective on the Gospel and the life of faith that follows I'd recommend The King Jesus Gospel by Scot McKnight and Social Holiness: A Way of Living for God's Nation (aka Journey Towards Holiness) by Alan Kreider.