Acts 10:1-11:18 ~ The Core of the Gospel Message (Kerygma)
Update: 2019-02-21
Description
As part of our continuing discussion about Peter’s speech(es) in Acts 10 and 11, we stepped back to look at how Peter and the apostles adjusted their presentation of the gospel message to each audience based on their knowledge of the Scriptures and Jewish religious traditions.
Through comparison and contrast, we identified key elements of his preaching that were present in each sermon. When everything else is stripped away, what is left? What is at the core (a.k.a. kerygma) of the gospel message?
>> Click to read this week’s passages in KJV, CSB, ESV, NIV: Acts 10:1-11:18 <<
Acts 10:1-11:18 ~ The Core of the Gospel
Common elements in gospel sermons preached by Peter in Acts 1-11.
* Recorded: LIVE. This audio has been edited for class member privacy, time, and content.
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
PowerPoint Presentation:
There was no PowerPoint this week.
White Board Notes:
More on Kerygma
In his abstract on Kerygma (below), B. Scott Lewis explains the term and its usage by theologians:
“The descriptive term ‘kerygmatic’ comes from the Greek word kerygma, meaning to preach or proclaim. The term is frequently used by kerygmatic theologians (e.g. Rudolf Bultmann, Karl Barth) to describe the act of preaching that calls for an existential faith in the meaning of Jesus. The term kerygma was used by theologians to denote the content of apostolic preaching which consisted of historical facts about Jesus’ life and ministry (e.g. death, burial, resurrection, and ascension) for understanding the meaning Jesus (e.g. C. H. Dodd). According to kerymatic theologians, when the content of the primitive kerygma is preached today (i.e. Jesus’ death and resurrection) it is understood that God calls upon hearers to believe in God’s act in Christ, so that hearers recognize their judgment of sin and receive grace in the present. In other words, this ‘proclaimed word’ is an existential encounter with Jesus where the saving event of God — as described in the historical content of the kerygma — reoccurs in the proclaiming act in the present. Although less concerned with the historical sources for understanding the meaning of Jesus, kerygmatic theologians understand the proclaiming act to be God calling upon unbelievers to encounter the meaning of Jesus in an existential manner. This kerygmatic theology as articulated by Karl Barth, Rudolf Bultmann, and others became a unified theological position during the 20th century. ”
Banner Photo Credit: Carlos de Almeida @carlosriba on Unsplash
Through comparison and contrast, we identified key elements of his preaching that were present in each sermon. When everything else is stripped away, what is left? What is at the core (a.k.a. kerygma) of the gospel message?
>> Click to read this week’s passages in KJV, CSB, ESV, NIV: Acts 10:1-11:18 <<
Acts 10:1-11:18 ~ The Core of the Gospel
Common elements in gospel sermons preached by Peter in Acts 1-11.
* Recorded: LIVE. This audio has been edited for class member privacy, time, and content.
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
PowerPoint Presentation:
There was no PowerPoint this week.
White Board Notes:
More on Kerygma
In his abstract on Kerygma (below), B. Scott Lewis explains the term and its usage by theologians:
“The descriptive term ‘kerygmatic’ comes from the Greek word kerygma, meaning to preach or proclaim. The term is frequently used by kerygmatic theologians (e.g. Rudolf Bultmann, Karl Barth) to describe the act of preaching that calls for an existential faith in the meaning of Jesus. The term kerygma was used by theologians to denote the content of apostolic preaching which consisted of historical facts about Jesus’ life and ministry (e.g. death, burial, resurrection, and ascension) for understanding the meaning Jesus (e.g. C. H. Dodd). According to kerymatic theologians, when the content of the primitive kerygma is preached today (i.e. Jesus’ death and resurrection) it is understood that God calls upon hearers to believe in God’s act in Christ, so that hearers recognize their judgment of sin and receive grace in the present. In other words, this ‘proclaimed word’ is an existential encounter with Jesus where the saving event of God — as described in the historical content of the kerygma — reoccurs in the proclaiming act in the present. Although less concerned with the historical sources for understanding the meaning of Jesus, kerygmatic theologians understand the proclaiming act to be God calling upon unbelievers to encounter the meaning of Jesus in an existential manner. This kerygmatic theology as articulated by Karl Barth, Rudolf Bultmann, and others became a unified theological position during the 20th century. ”
Banner Photo Credit: Carlos de Almeida @carlosriba on Unsplash
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