Available Formats
Sin, the Human Predicament, and Salvation in the Gospel of John
By (Author) Associate Professor Mathew E. Sousa
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
T.& T.Clark Ltd
18th May 2023
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
New Testaments
226.506
Paperback
144
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Mathew E. Sousa demonstrates that in certain respects, Johns doctrine of salvation fails to align with its customary depiction in Johannine scholarship. Sousa suggests that, according to John, the human predicament is not merely unbelief or a lack of mental perception, and Jesuss mission consists not merely of revelation and/or a purely forensic atonement. Rather, Jesus is (for John) the one who makes true and everlasting life an accomplished fact for humanity, and in doing so Jesus reveals the true nature of the predicament from which he saves. Sousa argues that salvation in the Gospel of John concerns ethics and the quality or condition of human corporeality. The matters of sin and death in particular also make clear that, according to John, the human predicament is a reality that in various ways persists for believers as they both are and become children of God. Sousa thus concludes that salvation for John consists of far more than the emergence of belief in a moment of decision.
Mathew E. Sousa (PhD, Fuller Theological Seminary) teaches courses on New Testament literature and interpretation at Fuller Theological Seminary, USA.