Book Report
Book Report
Book Report
Dunn focus on the canon to doing NT theology. The continuity and discontinuity
between Jewish bible and Christian bible is also the issue to doing NT theology. The author
said, “There can be no doubt that for the NT writers, the OT was a major and determining
factor in their own theologizing. No NT theology can ignore the OT or the profundity of its
He discus central features and key distinctive under four heads throughout the whole
book. These are God: God as one, Salvation: how God saves, Israel: the elect nation, Torah:
how the people of God should live. He discuss that NT theology would be quite possible to
follow the dominant pattern of NT theologies of the last fifty years and examine each NT
writing or group of NT writings in sequence. If the subject matter was a single theme,
Christology, soteriology, ecclesiology, ethics, that would be a sensible way to proceed. But if
what has already been said is valid, then it follows that the structure and content of any NT
biblical theology will be decided by the way the questions of continuity- discontinuity and
unity-diversity are handled. The fundamental issue for a NT biblical theology is whether the
message of Jesus or the gospel about Jesus introduced a radical disjuncture with these central
features of what we may fairly call Israel’s biblical theology. God, the one God, creator of the
cosmos and the nations, has committed himself to be Israel’s God, to save and sustain Israel
as his people, and has given them the Torah to show them how they should live as his people.
This means that none of the themes can be treated in isolation from the rest.
The major topics he covers
In Chapter three, the author discuss Christ is the true God and true man. God is
always dealing with his creatures through Jesus like the ancient forefathers of Israel. The
theo-logical givens inherited by the NT can be briefly reviewed under six heads, God as one,
God as Creator and Judge, The god of Israel, God as transcendent and immanent, Angelic
intermediaries and God’s wisdom/ word. A NT theo-logy must include consideration of the
considering some of the language and imagery they drew upon to make sense of what they
believed had happened to him and what he embodied. Teacher and prophet, Messiah, Son of
Man, Son of God, Lord, Wisdom/ word of God and The worship of Jesus. The author has not
focused attention on the diversity of Christological claims made regarding Jesus. But the
restraint of the Synoptic Evangelists in their portrayal of Jesus should not be ignored. The
unifying focus on Christ as both the name round which the first Christians gathered and as
revealing the ways of God and the character of God more fully than ever before has been
clearly drawn out above. The theologizing of the first Christians did not begin with
themselves. They remembered a Jesus who had prayed to God as his Father and who had
found in the vision of Dan 7:13-14 a source for his expectation of vindication. They did not
need to abandon or to transform his teaching to make it serve as gospel for them, it was quite
sufficient for the Jesus tradition to be held within a framework beginning with the baptism of
John and climaxing in Jesus’ death and resurrection. The theological reflection about Jesus
became more extravagant. Long familiar talk of the angel of the Lord and the Wisdom and
Word of God remind us that earliest Christian reflection on Jesus as the one who reveals God
In chapter four, the author has sketched the outlines of salvation in broad term in these
opening sentences precisely because the biblical language of salvation displays the same
breadth in both Testaments. The term salvation sums up the help needed, the rescue hoped
for, the condition and situation of one who has survived all such perils and attained to a state
beyond such threatening dangers—the state of having been save. The final salvation is
conceived as a state beyond daily human living, given by God, some kind of utopia or
heaven. The theme of salvation highlights the issues of continuity and discontinuity as
sharply as any other. The recognition of utter dependence on the loving kindness and grace of
God is consistent throughout, and of God’s amazing faithfulness and saving righteousness.
That God makes provision for human salvation, for dealing with failure and transgression is a
red thread that binds both Testaments together. The theme of hope re-emerges even after
seemingly irrevocable disaster. The death of Jesus and the resurrection of Jesus marked not
only events in time but could be understood as encapsulating the whole process of personal
In Chapter five, the author discuss about being the body of Christ. The tension
between the principle of an elect nation and belief in one God who is God of all and
concerned for all peoples runs from the beginning of the Abrahamic story. It is as evident in
the prophets as in the mission of Jesus: to what extent was the restoration of Israel central to
Jesus’ own conception of his mission, and how “exclusive” was that? The call to be a
blessing to the nations is consistent, and the possibility of a universalism predicted on God’s
mercy is there throughout. If the other side of “the Gentile problem” is “the problem of
Israel,” then the biblical theology of “the church of God” speaks directly to the ongoing
concerns of Jewish/Christian dialogue. It indicates to us not least that the question of the
relationship between Judaism and Christianity, between Jew and Christian, is much more one
In Chapter six, the law is a fourth fundamental issue for biblical theology according to
Dunn. Ethics is the daily expression of theology one of the tests or fruits by which the truth
and value of theology can be witnessed and assessed. Theology is not to be restricted to
statements of and discussions about belief. The religion inculcated in OT and NT embraces
the whole of life not life separated from others not life in the holy place shut off from the
outside world not private as distinct from public life. So ethics is part of theology. And
theology provides the principles and the motivation for ethics. Theology is the logos of
though ethics is the logos of speech, thought coming to expression in action. Without the two
The meaning of theologizing, NT writer’s doing NT theology and doing Theology today
Reformed antithesis between scripture and tradition. NT writers depended heavily on the OT.
It was essential for them that they should be able to claim and claim vividly and effectively,
that what they were writing was wholly in accord with their scriptures. Today, people are
more and more enlighten and theologizing do not enough if it does not go through or cover
God’s election of Israel does not mean that God is only belongs to Israel. He is the
God of all nations and initiates first to the human to deal with him. God’s liberation grace is
not only deliverance from sin but from the troubles, physical, mental needs There will be a lot
of burden of being Christian in this country. However, God has chosen us and want us to
reflect his image in us. Therefore, I enjoy my life with God even though I’m in happy or
I have learn that the continuity and discontinuity of OT and NT is really important in
doing NT theology. The author do NT theology by linking the Jewish biblical theology and
Christian biblical theology throughout the whole book. He discuss about the God in OT and
Jesus in NT.