Authority in the New Testament and the New Testament’s Authority
Publication date
2017
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Abstract
In an essayistic manner, drawing on both exegetical and systematic theological insights, this paper explores the contours of the notion of authority in the New Testament, arguing that authority in the New Testament is primarily the performance of (liberating) authority by Christ, to which the New Testament witnesses. This witness is the New Testament’s own source of authority, but only in as far as the communities reading the New Testament engage in a communal praxis that is in line with Jesus’ own exercise of authority. The New Testament, it is argued, operates in a manner similar to that of a sacrament, while the diversity contained within its canon offers encouragement for an ongoing search for identity in Christ, rather than constituting a theological embarrassment.
Keywords
authority, hermeneutics, biblical interpretation, canonical texts, sacramentality, Taverne
Citation
Smit, P B A 2017, 'Authority in the New Testament and the New Testament’s Authority', Ecclesiology, vol. 13, no. 1, pp. 83-101. https://doi.org/10.1163/17455316-01301006