Isaiah's Fourth Servant Song: Vicarious Suffering and the Theology of Atonement
Explore Isaiah 52:13–53:12, examining the theology of vicarious suffering, the identity of the servant, and the foundation of Christian atonement theology.
Explore Isaiah 52:13–53:12, examining the theology of vicarious suffering, the identity of the servant, and the foundation of Christian atonement theology.
Explore Jeremiah's theology of judgment and hope, examining the new covenant promise, the confessions, and the personal cost of prophetic ministry.
Explore the typological connection between Job, Isaiah's Suffering Servant, and Christ. How the cross answers Job's unanswered question about innocent suffe...
Comprehensive analysis of the Book of Job's engagement with innocent suffering, exploring theodicy, retribution theology, divine speeches, and pastoral impl...
Explore the creation theology of Job 38–41 — God's cosmic survey, Behemoth and Leviathan, Hebrew wisdom terminology, and ecological implications for contemp...
Examine God's speeches from the whirlwind in Job 38–41 — creation theology, the limits of human wisdom, and the transforming power of divine encounter.
Examine the theology of Job's friends — their retribution theology, its appeal and failure, and the pastoral lessons for ministry with those who suffer.
A scholarly introduction to the book of Job — its genre, place in wisdom literature, structure, and enduring theological questions.
Explore Job's lament tradition as a model for pastoral ministry — the anatomy of honest prayer, the recovery of lament in worship, and creating space for.
Examine James 5:11's commendation of Job's patience — the meaning of hypomonē, the teleological purpose of suffering, and preaching Job in contemporary.