72 pages • 2 hours read
AnonymousA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
The New Testament is centered around a message of “good news,” which is the meaning of the word “gospel.” In Jesus’s teaching, this good news is the announcement of the kingdom of God (Mark 1:14-15), whereas the epistles tend to focus the gospel message on the identity and actions of Jesus himself. This apparent disjunction marks less of a change than it might appear at first glance; both messages are rooted in the idea that God’s saving action has broken into the history of humanity in a new and transformative way. Jesus’s proclamation of the kingdom of God is connected to Jewish expectations of the messianic age and the last days—namely, that God would send his chosen emissary, his Messiah, to restore his people and save them from their enemies, leading to a golden age of the reign of God. The early Christian gospel retained this idea, but rather than phrasing it in terms of the kingdom of God, they saw those expectations as having been inaugurated in Jesus’s life, death, and resurrection, so they referred to the gospel in regard to what Jesus had done: “Remember
By Anonymous
Arabian Nights
Anonymous, Richard Francis Burton, A.S. Byatt
Arden of Faversham
Anonymous
A Woman in Berlin
Anonymous, Hans Magnus Enzensberger, Philip Boehm, Marta Hillers
Bible: Old Testament: English Standard Version
Anonymous
Deuteronomy
Anonymous
Diary of an Oxygen Thief
Anonymous
Do Not Stand at My Grave and Weep
Anonymous
Everyman
Anonymous
Go Ask Alice
Beatrice Sparks, Carlo Corsi, Selçuk Budak, Anonymous
Hebrew Bible
Anonymous
Holy Bible
Anonymous
Homeric Hymns
Anonymous, Hugh G. Evelyn-White
Laxdaela Saga
Anonymous
Lazarillo De Tormes
Anonymous
Magna Carta Libertatum
Stephen Langton, Anonymous
Mahabharata
Anonymous
Nibelungenlied
Anonymous
Njals Saga
Anonymous
One Thousand and One Nights: Complete Arabian Nights Collection
Anonymous, Edward William Lane, Jonathan Scott, Andrew Lang, John Payne, Richard Francis Burton
Popol Vuh
Anonymous, Michael Bazzett