The Crucifixion : Understanding the Death of Jesus Christ
The Crucifixion : Understanding the Death of Jesus Christ
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Author(s): Rutledge, Fleming
ISBN No.: 9780802847324
Pages: 696
Year: 201511
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 62.10
Status: Out Of Print

Stanley Hauerwas -- Duke Divinity School "This is a work of a lifetime that could only be written by someone who has lived a life determined by the cross." Scot McKnight -- author of The Jesus Creed "In this amazingly complex but clear book Fleming Rutledge goes deftly where few seem willing to go -- to the variety of imaginations shaping early Christian explorations of the significance of Jesus'' death. She is one of the few theologians who not only preach inclusivism but practice it by inviting all points of view into the discussion." Marilyn McCord Adams -- Rutgers University "To those who think they want a maximally mellow God who overlooks our faults and accepts us just as we are, Rutledge''s challenge is to ''get real.'' Twentieth-century atrocities bear witness: there is something drastically wrong with the human condition, which only God can fix. Setting things right calls for crucifixion, not only Christ''s but also ours. Rutledge has given us a very Pauline book, full of information and observations to provoke clergy to preach the cross to their congregations." Leanne Van Dyk -- Columbia Theological Seminary "Before we can get to the glorious resurrection, we must take full account of the tragic necessity of the cross.


Penetrating and unflinching in its insistence on Jesus Christ, condemned, crucified, dead, and buried, this book powerfully demonstrates that the crucifixion of the Son of God is good news of cosmic and comprehensive scope." Richard J. Mouw -- Fuller Theological Seminary "Though I have been thinking much about the cross of Christ for a half-century now, Fleming Rutledge has taught me many new things in this wonderful book. And where she addresses matters that I have long cherished, she has inspired me anew. This book is a gift to all of us who pray for a genuine revival of crucicentric preaching and cruciform discipleship!" Larry W. Hurtado -- University of Edinburgh "Demonstrating impressively wide reading, incisive observations, and a passionate concern for clear thinking and faithful preaching, this book is a big read but well worth the effort, especially for clergy -- but also for thoughtful laity." George Hunsinger -- Princeton Theological Seminary "After publishing numerous books of powerful sermons, remarkable for their biblical depth and their contemporary relevance, Fleming Rutledge has now produced this profound volume on the saving significance of Christ''s death. She makes the welcome argument that Christus Victor themes need to be counterbalanced by priestly elements like substitution and expiation.


Here is the kind of strong theology that will undergird strong preaching. Preachers who take this book to heart could well revitalize the church." Katherine Sonderegger -- Virginia Theological Seminary "Fleming Rutledge here lays out the horror of the cross with unflinching honesty and with a patient, full exposition of the rich themes of Christ''s redeeming death. She does not shy away from the demands of her theological vision, taking up motifs of satisfaction, substitution, rectification, and divine wrath in turn. Throughout, Rutledge draws on the rich storehouse of a preacher. The whole world stands under her gaze -- literary examples, political folly and cruelty, horrendous evils of war and torment and torture, religious timidity and self-deception, human faithlessness and sin. But always the gospel rings out. Christ''s cross has won the victory, and it is all from God.


This book is a moving testimony to the courage, intelligence, and faithfulness of one of the church''s premier preachers. Every student of the Scriptures needs this book." John D. Witvliet -- Calvin Institute of Christian Worship "A deeply probing and richly evocative exploration of the central mystery of the Christian faith. This is a book to contemplate, to savor, to reread. It promises to nourish renewed Christian preaching, a new generation of Christian poets and hymnwriters, and ministries of witness, evangelism, pastoral care, worship, and Christian education that brim with doxological testimonies about the counter-intuitive, counter-cultural reality of Jesus'' life-giving death. It is easy to glibly repeat Paul''s claim that Jesus'' death is a scandal and stumbling block. It is quite something else to let that claim transform how you perceive the world and the triune God who created it.


This book confronts all that is glib and evokes that life-giving transformation." Philip G. Ziegler -- University of Aberdeen "To read this book is to share in a work of joyful, honest, evangelical thinking done right at the foot of the pulpit steps for the sake of the one thing that finally matters in the church -- the hearing and proclamation of the word of the cross in all its scandalous power." Mark Galli -- editor of Christianity Today "I can hardly think of a book more necessary for our time. Many well-meaning attempts to summarize the good news today barely allude to the cross, and we''re left with an anemic if not a false gospel. Read, mark, and inwardly digest this book if you want to learn about the cross that truly rectifies the ungodly, even the likes of you and me." Paul Scott Wilson -- University of Toronto "In beautiful flowing words, Fleming Rutledge encourages the church to get over its often embarrassed silence on the crucifixion. Her immediate accomplishment is brilliant.


She recovers a rich array of biblical images relating to Christ''s death and places them within the final stages of a drama in which God is the principal actor and humanity has a vital role. Persistent readers will find their hearts transformed. Preachers will be emboldened to speak more frequently of the cross, contributing to the gospel renewal of the church." Nicholas Wolterstorff -- Yale University "The word that came to my mind as I read Fleming Rutledge''s book The Crucifixion was ''bracing'': the book is bracing in its vigorous affirmation of the centrality of Christ''s crucifixion in the Christian proclamation, bracing in its description of the unspeakable horror and shame of the crucifixion, bracing in its affirmation that we are one and all sinners, bracing in its identification and rejection of the many forms of theological silliness now inhabiting the church. Though meant for pastors and laypeople, this book will also benefit scholars. It carries its deep learning with eloquence and grace. I will be returning to it." J.


Louis Martyn + -- Union Theological Seminary "In the crucifixion we sense anew the intersection at which Christian drama and Christian dogma meet one another with announcements that are emphatically universal and nothing less than cosmic. At that intersection we are truly fortunate to have the voice of Fleming Rutledge, one of the most gifted theological preachers of our time. In her writing we encounter the confluence of high drama and arresting dogma, as they work together to strengthen the preacher and provide a high-protein diet that will nourish the congregation to vigorous health." Stephen Westerholm -- McMaster University "If churches of the twenty-first century are to bear any relation to those of the first, then the cross of Christ must return to the center of their proclamation and life: that, in essence, is the message of Fleming Rutledge''s Crucifixion , a book that should serve to mediate much contemporary biblical scholarship on the subject to ministers and other interested readers. Unlike a good deal of that scholarship, however, Rutledge treats a variety of New Testament motifs that speak to the salvific effects of Christ''s death, refusing to allow any one motif to so dominate the discussion as to exclude the others. Richly illustrated with examples from literature and current events, this book should prove a gold mine for preachers at the same time as it invites the careful reflection of every reader on the mystery of salvation." David Bentley Hart -- author of The Beauty of the Infinite and Atheist Delusions "Rutledge''s work on the crucifixion is not only broad but also deep. Thought-provoking, often moving, this book offers a genuinely novel approach to a topic on which it often seems nothing new can be said.


" Robert W. Jenson -- Center for Catholic and Evangelical Theology "This justly celebrated preacher has been digging into the doctrine of atonement for many years. Here is the rich harvest of her labors -- a resource especially for preachers like herself." Douglas Harink -- The King''s University, Edmonton, Canada "In this bold, uncompromising, nuanced, and expansive work Rutledge takes us through -- and beyond -- theories of atonement, avoiding all merely individualistic, spiritualized, religious, moralistic, and therapeutic reductions of the meaning of the crucifixion. Rutledge resolutely proclaims the truth of Christ crucified. To all priests, preachers, and professors: if you care about the church and its mission in history, read this book!" Joseph Mangina -- University of Toronto " ''Who put the roses on the cross?'' asked Goethe, who in fact preferred that the brutal cross be covered in roses. Fleming Rutledge brushes the roses aside and asks us to look at the cross and, even more so, at Him who hung upon it for our sak.


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