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The Message of Romans

With Study Guide

More about the book

Paul's letter to the young church in Rome has dramatically influenced Christians through the ages. It has been described as 'a gateway into heaven'. In his letter Paul gives a complete picture of the gospel - the fullest and grandest in the New Testament. His horizons are vast, taking in time and eternity, the past, present and future of humanity, and the great themes of justification, sanctification and glorification. This is the most personally rooted of John Stott's expositions, for he confesses to having re-encountered Paul's letter constantly throughout his Christian life. At the same time, he interacts with other commentators, some of whom are challenging time-honoured traditional interpretations. He sees Romans as a Christian manifesto for our increasingly unstable world, emphasizing the good news of freedom through Jesus Christ. Paul's vision of this freedom is astonishing. It overcomes ethnic conflict, the darkness of moral guilt, condemnation from God and alienation from others. It is a freedom to serve God and our neighbours in love.

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The Message of Romans, John Stott, David Stone

Language
Released
1994
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(Paperback),
Book condition
Good
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€4.79

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Title
The Message of Romans
Subtitle
With Study Guide
Language
English
Released
1994
Format
Paperback
ISBN10
0851108261
ISBN13
9780851108261
Series
Description
Paul's letter to the young church in Rome has dramatically influenced Christians through the ages. It has been described as 'a gateway into heaven'. In his letter Paul gives a complete picture of the gospel - the fullest and grandest in the New Testament. His horizons are vast, taking in time and eternity, the past, present and future of humanity, and the great themes of justification, sanctification and glorification. This is the most personally rooted of John Stott's expositions, for he confesses to having re-encountered Paul's letter constantly throughout his Christian life. At the same time, he interacts with other commentators, some of whom are challenging time-honoured traditional interpretations. He sees Romans as a Christian manifesto for our increasingly unstable world, emphasizing the good news of freedom through Jesus Christ. Paul's vision of this freedom is astonishing. It overcomes ethnic conflict, the darkness of moral guilt, condemnation from God and alienation from others. It is a freedom to serve God and our neighbours in love.