T. Desmond Alexander
Autor von New Dictionary of Biblical Theology: Exploring the Unity & Diversity of Scripture
Über den Autor
T. Desmond Alexander (PhD, The Queens University, Belfast) is senior lecturer in biblical studies and director of postgraduate studies at Union Theological College in Belfast, Northern Ireland.
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Werke von T. Desmond Alexander
New Dictionary of Biblical Theology: Exploring the Unity & Diversity of Scripture (2000) — Herausgeber — 903 Exemplare
Dictionary of the Old Testament: Pentateuch (The IVP Bible Dictionary Series) (2003) — Herausgeber — 682 Exemplare
The City of God and the Goal of Creation: "An Introduction to the Biblical Theology of the City of God" (Short Studies… (2018) 166 Exemplare
Face to Face with God: A Biblical Theology of Christ as Priest and Mediator (Essential Studies in Biblical Theology) (2022) 92 Exemplare
A cidade de Deus e o objetivo da criação 1 Exemplar
La ciudad de Dios y la meta de la creación (Estudios Breves de Teología Bíblica) (Spanish Edition) (2022) 1 Exemplar
Discover Jesus: Leader's Manual 1 Exemplar
Law 1 Exemplar
Temple 1 Exemplar
The Kingdom of God 1 Exemplar
Zugehörige Werke
Kommentar zur Bibel: AT und NT in einem Band (1953) — Mitwirkender, einige Ausgaben — 1,927 Exemplare
The Lord's Anointed: Interpretation of Old Testament Messianic Texts (Tyndale House Studies) (1995) — Mitwirkender — 77 Exemplare
The Routledge Companion to Modern Christian Thought (Routledge Religion Companions) (2013) — Mitwirkender — 14 Exemplare
Reading the Law: Studies in Honor of Gordon J. Wenham (Library of Hebrew Bible/Old Testament Studies) (2007) — Mitwirkender — 9 Exemplare
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Wissenswertes
- Rechtmäßiger Name
- Alexander, Thomas Desmond
- Geburtstag
- 1955
- Geschlecht
- male
- Nationalität
- UK
- Berufe
- Theologian
- Organisationen
- Union Theological College, Belfast, Northern Ireland, UK
- Kurzbiographie
- Dr Desmond (Desi) Alexander took up the position of Senior Lecturer in Biblical Studies and Director of Postgraduate Studies at Union Theological College in Belfast, Northern Ireland in September 2009, having been Director of Christian Training for the Presbyterian Church in Ireland for ten years. He had previously lectured for 18 years in Semitic Studies at the Queen's University of Belfast. He has written and contributed to a wide variety of academic and reference books on the Bible, most recently From Eden to the New Jerusalem (IVP; Kregel). His areas of expertise are the Pentateuch and Biblical Theology. An elder in Fitzroy Presbyterian Church, he is married to Anne, and they have two children, Jane and David.
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Throughout scripture, we learn that no one can see God face to face and live. Yet the promise of the New Testament is that one day we all will have the veil removed and see God face to face, and live forever in his presence. How can this be?
T. Desmond Alexander explores this in this sixth volume in the Essentials in Biblical Theology, focusing on the theme of priesthood and mediation throughout scripture, culminating with the portrait of Christ in Hebrews as a priest and mediator superior to all those who have gone before.
Alexander begins with a study of the portable sanctuary that Moses is instructed to erect amid the camp and how it is a model of the heavenly sanctuary, down to the perfect cubicle shape of the Holy of Holies, as is the new Jerusalem, descending from heaven as a cube. It is the place where heaven and earth meet, a footstool, as it were, of God’s heavenly throne. It also reproduces in its outer courtyard, holy place and Holy of Holies, the three zones on Mount Sinai, a new idea to me.
Then Alexander goes more deeply into the concept of holiness, the consecration of priests and of Aaron and the related concepts of clean and unclean, with the sanctuary being holy, the Israelite camp clean, and the world and nations beyond unclean. Yet with all of this, Aaron can only come before the Lord once a year, and not daily. But it is God’s intent, even if it is not yet truly face to face, that this be a tent of meeting, where God, mediated through the priests’ sacrifices, meets his people. He also deals with the “tent of meeting” where Moses talked to God “face to face” as it were, with the barrier of the tent between Moses and the cloud. When Moses asks to see God’s glory, he is told that he cannot see God’s face, lest he die. The mediation of human priesthood can only go so far. And even this is only possible by the daily intercession of Aaron and the priests, dramatically portrayed at one point when Aaron, burning incense, interposes himself between the dead and the living when God strikes Israel with a plague.
Daily sacrifices and incense are burned for the sins of the people, beginning at the outside of the camp and going into the holy place of the tent. Then on the Day of Atonement, the priest passes within the Holy of Holies to offer sacrifice for the people. Alexander shows how this pattern is fulfilled once and for all by Christ who is both priest and sacrifice, who in himself is mediator. Yet how can Jesus, born of the tribe of Judah, and not a Levite, and certainly not a descendent of Aaron, do this? Alexander shows how this is the significance of the reference to Jesus as a priest of the order of Melchizedek, the king of Salem. He is the priest-king, David’s greater son of Psalm 110. Hence he mediates a better covenant as head of a kingdom of priests, devoted to the service of God.
The wonder, as Alexander shows, is that all this is possible through the priesthood and mediation of Jesus, by which we are cleansed, sanctified and perfected. It is not that we must serve God but rather that we may. Our hope is one of being able to boldly approach, looking for forgiveness and cleansing, not only to serve but to rest. Alexander traces all this out, step by step from Sinai and the portable sanctuary and priesthood, to the fulfillment in the Son who more effectively mediates for us and intercedes than any priest. Read this to not only understand all the regulations around the sanctuary and priesthood but to grasp their wondrous fulfillment in Jesus and what this has won for us as his people.
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Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary review copy of this book from the publisher.… (mehr)