The Apostolic Preaching and Its Developments

by C. H. Dodd

C.H. Dodd is recognized as one of the great New Testament scholars of the twentieth century. Dr. Dodd was for many years Professor of New Testament at Cambridge University.


This book of three lectures was published by Harper and Row, 1964.


SUMMARY

(ENTIRE BOOK) Three lectures given at King’s College, London, in 1935, describing preaching in the early church as found particularly in the Gospels, John and in the writings of Paul.


Chapters

  • Chapter One: The Primitive Preaching

    The very first Christians proclaimed that the great divine event, the eschaton, had already entered history; the Messiah had come, and any day the Lord would be coming a second time upon the clouds of heaven to end the age. When this did not happen, the demand for readjustment was a principal cause of the development of early Christian thought.

  • Chapter Two: The Gospels

    Dodd explains why we cannot expect to find in the Gospels bare matter of fact, unaffected by the interpretation borne by the kerygma, (preaching or proclamation) of the early church. The present task of New Testament criticism is to explore, by a comparative study of the several writings, the common faith which evoked them, and which they aimed at interpreting to an ever-widening public.

  • Chapter Three: Paul and John

    The present task of New Testament criticism is to explore, by a comparative study of the several writings, the common faith which evoked them, and which they aimed at interpreting to an ever-widening public.

  • Preface