Orthodox Christians affirm and worship a triune God. But how should this affect our reading of the Bible? In The Trinity and the Bible, Scott R. Swain asserts that not only does the Bible reveal the Trinity, but the Trinity illuminates our reading of the Bible.
Swain reflects on method and applies a Trinitarian framework to three exegetical studies. Explorations of three genres of New Testament literature—Gospel, epistle, and apocalyptic—display the profits of theological interpretation.
Through loving attention to the Scriptures, one can understand and marvel at the singular identity and activity of the triune God.
144 pages.
- (Re)turning to the Subject: Trinity and Biblical Interpretation
- The Bible and the Trinity in Recent Thought: Review, Analysis, and Constructive Proposal
- B. B. Warfield and the Biblical Doctrine of the Trinity: A Historical Experiment
- God’s Lordly Son: Mark 12:35–37 and Trinitarian Christology
- Heirs through God: Galatians 4:4–7 and the Doctrine of the Trinity
- To Him Who Sits on the Throne and to the Lamb: Hymning God’s Triune Name in Revelation 4–5
- Seven Axioms: On the Trinity, the Bible, and Theological Interpretation
Trinity and the Bible, The: On Theological Interpretation is in the following collections: