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Balla surveys and examines the challenges facing any attempt to write a New Testament theology and offers his own program for justifying such an undertaking. With a view toward uncovering a basic unity in the theology of the New Testament, Balla maps how the historian may indeed describe the theological content of the New Testament. He asserts orthodoxy was not a later development, but Christianity in its earliest form. He further argues that the canon's formation was not the result of a late decision; rather, it can be traced to moorings in the first century. 280 pages, trade paperback from Hendrickson.
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