Read Fortress Press's interview with James Dunn, only on fortressforum.com!
Few scholars have thought so long or so carefully about the role of
biblical authority in the light of historical-and literary-critical
scholarship as has James D. G. Dunn. Even fewer are as capable of
communicating profound respect for the biblical witness with genuine
insight into its complexity and pluriformity. Avoiding easyand
possibly misleadinganswers, Dunn offers precise responses to
questions about the history behind the Gospels and their consequent
trustworthiness; the original scandal presented by Jesus' teaching,
and by Paul's; the problem of pseudonymity in the Pauline letters and
elsewhere; and what weight should be given to what the Bible itself
says about scriptural authority, and to the final shape of the
biblical canon. This Second Edition includes new essays on "bridging
the gap between the academy and the church," the hallmarks of "good
exposition" of scripture, and a concluding chapter on the Bible as
living tradition.