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Make My Joy CompleteThe Price of Partnership in the Letter of Paul to the PhilippiansP10107Faith & SpiritualityGENRELI01AGeneral ReligionREL000000General ReligionBooks > Religion > General Religionhttps://dynamic. indigoimages. ca/books/056768959X. jpg?scaleup=true&width=600&quality=85&lang=enhttps://dynamic. indigoimages. ca/books/056768959X. jpg?scaleup=true&width=600&quality=85&lang=frhttps://www. indigo. ca/en-ca/the-price-of-partnership-in-the-letter-of-paul-to-the-philippians-make-my-joy-complete/9780567689597.htmlhttps://www. indigo. ca/fr-ca/the-price-of-partnership-in-the-letter-of-paul-to-the-philippians-make-my-joy-complete/9780567689597.htmlMark A. Jennings challenges the consensus that there is no clear single purpose that shapes the entire epistle to the Philippians; instead arguing that there is significant evidence for Paul to have written the letter with the sole intent of persuading the church to maintain its exclusive partnership with him and his gospel mission. Jennings examines each section of Philippians with standard historical-critical methods, rhetorical criticism, and social-scientific methods. Establishing that Paul's argument is rooted in three fundamental tenets, emphasis is first placed on koinonia, and the agreement that Paul and the Philippians had entered into regarding his apostolic mission. Second, Jennings looks at the repeated 'proofs' that Paul offers, that simultaneously affirm the ordained superiority of his apostolic mission and repudiate the claims of his rivals. Third, Jennings analyses the issue of finances in the epistle, discussing how Paul rhetorically transforms the Philippians' financial support into a salient indicator that they esteem his gospel mission authentic. Finally, whereas other scholars have argued that Paul entreats the Philippians to be steadfast in their commitment to the gospel of Christ, Jennings proposes that Paul urges the church to be steadfast in their commitment to his gospel of Christ. Jennings then considers how this seemingly small distinction has profound ramifications for understanding the letter, and shows the gap between these interpretations. Mark A. Jennings is Visiting Professor of New Testament at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, USA.68.95168.9568.95Mark A. JenningsFE9291C9-59C9-42E3-BC23-3AC82300A5BB978056768960397805676896090007115, 62.1TPPaperbackCouverture soupleB62606954engT and T ClarkT and T Clark2000.459.216.140.640.459.216.14112019-07-25T04:00:00ZTheophanic type-scenes" In The Pentateuch | P10107 by 144C68EF-6639-49BE-BF87-08CC76176CBB, Paperback | Indigo Chapters