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John: Evangelist and Interpreter

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This is revised and updated edition of a classic introduction to John's Gospel. New material includes new chapters on the current state of the question of the relationship between the Johannine and synoptic traditions; and the literary approach to John's Gospel. Footnotes and the bibliography have been extensively revised.

285 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1978

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About the author

Stephen S. Smalley

10 books1 follower
Stephen Stewart Smalley (11 May 1931 – 19 May 2024) was an English Anglican clergyman and scholar who was Dean of Chester.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for John Anthony.
968 reviews179 followers
September 22, 2017
I've long been in thrall to John's gospel: I love its mystical language. It's the gospel I'm most interested in, having studied the synoptics years ago, almost in another life!

Stephen Smalley's volume was an impulsive buy whilst browsing in a favourite book shop. I read it was meant for academics/scholars and perhaps I should have been deterred rather than seeing it as a challenge. It is dense, weighty, scholarly and rigorously sourced (ie 1/3 footnotes to 2/3 text): so it was hard going at times. It was balanced (almost infuriatingly so, nothing controversial here) as the author regards John's gospel to be.

The last 20 pages or so almost made my uphill ploughing worthwhile. This was when he “got down to brass tacks”, to use a northernism. Now I must re-read the Blessed John and see what benefit, if any, I've gained from this.
206 reviews3 followers
May 14, 2019
Stephen Smalley attacks the wayward theories of liberal theology on its own ground, using reasoned arguments and a lot of common sense to draw conclusions that land within the conservative scope, nullifying any liberal response having used their own weapons against them. On a few issues I felt Smalley didn't quite go far enough, but even so, having spent a lot of time exploring academic theology of various kinds, this book was a refreshing change and ought to be an valuable book for any conservative scholar.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews