Irenaeus, the Scriptures, and the Apostolic Writings

Re-Evaluating the Status of the New Testament Writings at the End of the Second Century

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April 30, 2025 | History

Irenaeus, the Scriptures, and the Apostolic Writings

Re-Evaluating the Status of the New Testament Writings at the End of the Second Century

"Kenneth Laing challenges the concept of Irenaeus as the primary witness to the point at which the New Testament achieved scriptural status, and calls into question some of the most basic conclusions and assumptions of New Testament canon formation scholarship. Laing proposes a new interpretation of Irenaeus' understanding of the nature and basis of authority of the New Testament writings, based on his christocentric theology of revelation. By exploring the texts themselves, the concept of authority, scriptural tradition and the question of inspiration, Laing argues that while the writings possess authority equal to the Jewish scriptures, it is their apostolic origin and the apostles' relationship to Christ - not inspiration - which forms the basis of the unique revelatory authority of the New Testament writings. Laing thus stresses that Irenaeus regards the New Testament writings as a written record of the apostolic tradition and the primary means of accessing its content, rather than as a purely scriptural text."--

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
224

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Book Details


Classifications

Library of Congress
BR65.I64 L25 2022eb

Edition Identifiers

Open Library
OL33935089M
ISBN 13
9780567701930
OCLC/WorldCat
1264735366
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
10.5040/9780567701954

Work Identifiers

Work ID
OL25332334W

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