Presence of the Future: The Eschatology of Biblical Realism
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Average customer review:Product Description
After surveying the debate over eschatology, Ladd discusses the promise of the kingdom, the fulfillment of the promise, and the consummation of the promise. Throughout the book he develops his thesis that the kingdom of God involves two great movements--fulfillment within history and consummation at the end of history.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #39273 in Books
- Published on: 1996-06
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 384 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9780802815316
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
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Customer Reviews
Excellent Book on Already/Not Yet Eschatology
This book is a book that should be read by all who are interested in eschatology and redemptive-historical themes. Ladd does an excellent job demonstrating that God's promised Kingdom had already come in Jesus Christ. He uses ample Scripture verses and uses very scholarly secondary sources to back up his points. He interacts with many scholars who have written books and articles on this subject. His main focus is that God's kingdom has already come, yet is awaiting a future consummation. He distinguishes between apocalyptic and eschatological imagery used in the Bible. He shows the fallacies of both Covenant Theology and Classical Dispensationalism. As a Progressive Dispensationalist I do agree with a lot of things that Ladd writes about in the book, though not everything. Ladd is considered a Kingdom Theologian (no wonder Bock says that PD and Ladd's view have a lot in common). Without becoming so dogmatic in the Reformed/Covenant tradition or Classical Dispensationalism, Christians should read this book and try to understand that God's Kingdom has both a present and future aspect to it.
THE book on Inaugurated Eschatology
George Eldon Ladd is considered among theologians today the second most influential theologian among evangelicals. This book, and his New Testament Theology, are why.
Ladd's theology of the "Already/Not Yet" Kingdom of God has become the standard theological position today. It states that Jesus' coming was the fulfillment of the prophetic stream of thought concerning Messiah--but not the consumation. it emphasizes that the Kingdom of God is primarily a rule rather than a realm, yet it does not deny that there will be a future Millenial Kingdom.
It also sees as errant any direct idenitification of the Kingdom of God with the Church. Yet the Church is not a parenthesis, but was the natural part of the plan of God in extending that Kingdom to the world.
In short, if you want to understand how Evangelical Theology today, and for the forseeable future, understands the Kingdom of God, you must start here.
An excellent introduction to Biblical Eschatology
If you are going to understand what Jesus was doing here on Earth, you've got to understand the notion of the Kingdom of God and to understand that you've got to take into account the Jewish and Old Testament background of the concept. This is what Ladd attempts to do in this book - he argues for what has become the dominant position among biblical scholars regarding the kingdom of God and New Testament eschatology. Ladd ably argues against views of the kingdom that interpret it as solely in the future and instead supports the view that the kingdom is already present, though not yet consummated - that we, as some say, are living in a time 'between the times' where the old age of sin and death and the new age of life and salvation are overlapping, the first defeated and to pass away and the second inaugurated and to be fulfilled. Ladd interprets the life of the church and of the individual Christian in kingdom terms and develops a very nice view of the church and salvation in relation to the kingdom of God. Some of his arguments are out of date and the views of Jesus and his ministry have become much more nuanced and better grounded in the Old Testament and Jewish backgrounds (I would particularly recommend some of NT Wright's work), but this book is a great place to start for the beginner of moderate intelligence or learning who is willing to spend the time to think things through and listen to what is being said. I first read this for my own personal edification while a Freshman in college and found it fairly easy to read for me and a great catalyst in introducing me to real biblical scholarship. For an easier, more accessible version of Ladd's basic views I recommend his 'Gospel of the Kingdom'.

