Digital Logos Edition
For a right understanding of what the Gospels teach concerning the “last things,” we must study the antecedents upon which that teaching was based. Eschatology, like so many other things, went through a process of development before it assumed that form which the Gospels have made so familiar to us. No developed growth can be satisfactorily studied without knowing something about its earlier processes of formation and the conditions under which development took place. The Doctrine of Last Things provides in-depth insight into what the Old Testament, apocalyptic literature, and Rabbinical literature have to say about the afterlife.
Explore more Classic Studies on Eschatology (27 vols.)
“must recognise in Old Testament Eschatology a body of beliefs which were common property, belonging to no one age” (Page 20)
“ ‘Orthodox Judaism’ and ‘Hellenistic Judaism,’ and both formed the basis of much that Christ taught.” (Page 6)
“the Gospels, is permeated with Jewish belief and thought.” (Page 1)