Thanks to the fine folks at Baker Academic, you can enter to win a copy of Lee Martin McDonald's The Story of Jesus in History and Faith : An Introduction.
You can enter up to four times:
(1) sign up to follow The Jesus Blog (comment below saying so)
(2) share by way of Facebook (comment below saying so)
(3) retweet the link to this giveaway @TheJesusBlog1 (comment below saying so)
(4) comment below with the saying(s) attributed to Jesus that you find most perplexing, or troubling
As always, we will use the true-random generator to select the winner. Just a tip: it is advantageous to enter multiple times by way of separate comments.
-anthony
I will do 1, 2, 3. Sounds like a great book.
ReplyDeleteGimme, gimme, gimme. Please.
ReplyDeleteEric T.
I follow the blog
ReplyDeleteShared on Facebook
ReplyDeleteI'm now following The Jesus Blog.
ReplyDeleteTweeted the giveaway
ReplyDeleteI'm now following The Jesus Blog.
ReplyDeleteI've now retweeted the link to this giveaway.
ReplyDeleteShared on Facebook.
ReplyDeleteRetweeted @TheJesusBlog1
ReplyDeleteI find Jesus' saying in Mk. 3.28-31 perplexing.
ReplyDelete"Sell everything you have and give to the poor"
ReplyDeleteI've now commented with the saying(s) attributed to Jesus that I find most perplexing, or troubling.
I signed up and liked this blog on Facebook months ago.
ReplyDeleteI signed up to follow The Jesus Blog
ReplyDeleteI just tweeted this: A good book give-a-way over at the @TheJesusBlog1 Check it out!
ReplyDeleteMost perplexing: Luck 10:18: "I saw Satan fall like lightening from heaven."
ReplyDeletesubscribed to the blog!
ReplyDeleteI want the book too. Looks like an interesting book.
ReplyDeleteI already follow the blog.
ReplyDeleteSubscribed via email.
ReplyDeleteMost perplexing: "salted with fire."
ReplyDeleteMost difficult: "Love the Lord your God...."
Tweeted.
ReplyDeletePerplexing: John 3:13, that is, if one follows the Byzantine textual tradition.
ReplyDeleteI will follow the blog!
ReplyDeleteI will follow this blog!
ReplyDeleteI follow the blog via the rss feed.
ReplyDeleteI'm afraid I'm too old to be perplexed with any Jesus saying: they're all too familiar by now. The most frustrating for me is "blessed are the meek", because I tend to be anything but.
I follow the blog
ReplyDeleteI posted on facebook too
ReplyDeleteAnd I tweeted the link
ReplyDeleteJesus' comments in John 10.34-5 to the "Jews" after they accused him of blasphemy about asserting himself to be equal to God by appealing to Ps 82.
ReplyDeletetweeted the giveaway! https://twitter.com/jenniferguo/status/428721228539367425
ReplyDelete"From the days of John the Baptist until now the kingdom of heaven suffers violence, and violent men take it by force" Matt 11:12
ReplyDelete"áŒÎŒáœŽÎœ áŒÎŒáœŽÎœ λÎÎ³Ï áœÎŒá¿Îœ, ÏÏ᜶Μ áŒÎ²ÏαᜰΌ γεΜÎÏΞαι áŒÎ³áœŒ εጰΌί." John 8:58
ReplyDeleteáŒÎŒáœŽÎœ áŒÎŒáœŽÎœ λÎÎ³Ï áœÎŒá¿Îœ, ÏÏ᜶Μ áŒÎ²ÏαᜰΌ γεΜÎÏΞαι áŒÎ³áœŒ εጰΌί." John 8:58.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a great book.
ReplyDeleteTweeted the giveaway
ReplyDeleteI always follow this great blog!
ReplyDeleteAnd I think that this blog is a helpful aid for those who study the Bible, generally, and more specific the NT, and you offer bright insights almost everyday. Congratulations from Catalonia!
ReplyDeleteI posted on Twitter.
ReplyDeleteI also posted on Facebook.
ReplyDeleteI also remain perplexed by the bit of the Sermon on the Mount in which Jesus tells those gathered not to throw pearls to swine (Matthew 7:6). Who are the swine? What are the pearls? And how does this connect with the notion that the Kingdom of Heaven is, among other things, a moment when sinners repent and enjoy forgiveness?
ReplyDeleteI have followed the blog.
ReplyDeleteAlready follow the blog
ReplyDeleteI've always found the "two swords" business in Luke 22:35-38 to be a bit odd
ReplyDeletePosted to Facebook
ReplyDeleteshared giveaway link on facebook.
ReplyDeleteMatthew 12:43 “When the unclean spirit has gone out of a person, it passes through waterless places seeking rest, but finds none.
ReplyDeleteLuke 16:1-13.
ReplyDeleteI have signed up to follow this blog.
ReplyDeleteI have shared on Facebook.
ReplyDeleteI have tweeted!
ReplyDelete"Give to every one who begs from you. . ." (Luke 6:30)
ReplyDeleteI already follow the blog. :)
ReplyDeleteI shared on Facebook.:)
ReplyDeleteThe whole "Turn the other cheek" thing has recently become extremely hard and troubling for me personally.
ReplyDeleteFor there are eunuchs who were born that way from their mother's womb; and there are eunuchs who were made eunuchs by men; and there are also eunuchs who made themselves eunuchs for the sake of the kingdom of heaven. He who is able to accept this, let him accept it.
ReplyDeleteI shared on Facebook...
ReplyDeleteShared on Facebook
ReplyDeleteRetweeted
ReplyDeleteMatt 16:28
ReplyDeletePerhaps the most mystifying statement: "Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing" (Luke 23:34).
ReplyDelete