Michael Green shines a light on salvation as it appears in Scripture and in our lives. In this perennial classic of soteriology, Michael Green explores the deeply human longing for salvation. Bu
Michael Green (1930–2019) was one of the best-known British evangelical theologians and preachers of his generation. A scholar with degrees from the universities of Oxford, Cambridge, and Toronto, Green had a passion for evangelism and a rare talent for communicating complex ideas in easy-to-understand language. In 1996, Archbishop of Canterbury George Carey granted Green a Lambeth degree of Doctor of Divinity. He led university missions on six continents, pastored St. Aldate's Church Oxford, and introduced innovative approaches in seminary education. He authored more than seventy books across a range of fields, including evangelism, apologetics, biblical commentary, and academic theology.
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Table of Contents
Foreword
Author’s Preface
1. The Language of Salvation in the Old Testament
2. The Hope of Salvation in the Old Testament
3. Salvation in the Jewish World of the First Century
4. Salvation in the Graeco-Roman World of the First Century
5. Salvation in the Preaching of John the Baptist
6. Salvation in the Teaching of Jesus
7. Salvation in the Evangelists
8. Salvation in the Early Preaching
9. Salvation in the Thought of Paul
10. Salvation in the Rest of the New Testament
11. Salvation: Some Current Problems Considered
Indexes
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