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Scot McKnight is a widely-recognized authority on the New Testament, early Christianity, and the historical Jesus. He is the Karl A. Olsson Professor in Religious Studies at North Park University (Chicago, Illinois). A popular and witty speaker, Dr. McKnight has given interviews on radios across the nation, has appeared on television, and is regularly asked to speak in local churches and educational events. Dr. McKnight obtained his Ph.D. at the University of Nottingham (1986). Click to continue reading Scot McKnight's Bio...
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If you do this again next year, hopefully you can add Joel B. Green's FF Bruce NICNT replacement to the list. I LOVE his Luke NICNT volume and I believe his Acts complement is supposed to be available Fall 2010. Given Green's mastery over Luke's 1st volume, I have high hopes for the 2nd.
-jeremy
The Interpretation series is certainly different than these, but I wonder what anyone makes of Willimon's commentary. I have it coming in the mail.
I don't read Greek, so I can't judge the big exegetical books, but when I led a class on Acts a while back I got a lot from Robert Wall's commentary in the New Interpreter's Bible, and from LT Johnson's Sacra Pagina volume. There were good things in Beverly Gaventa's Abingdon volume.
i too await Green's volume
and second Gaventa and Wall.
blessings
I would like to have some information about ministering to my pastor and what duties he has that we don't even know about so that we could help him.
I think you read Acts apart from Luke Johnson to your peril. While I am certainly more "conservative" than he is, and I don't think his "prophet" paradigm for Jesus and the apostles covers all the territory, he is very insightful and does a great job with literary and theological patterns.
Acts is a favourite I return to so have built up a lot over the years, the most recent being Justo Gonzalez, who brings a different cultural point of view which helps in translating cultural applications, and David Peterson's mammoth tome which I have also found more helpful than I thought it might be. Bruce was written in a time when the historical/non-historical debate was uppermost so you tend not to get the missional flow quite so well, but he's also a nostalgic read since he examined my Master's dissertation!
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