In this study, Lynne Moss Bahr explores the concept of temporality as central to Jesus’s proclamation of the Kingdom of God. Using insights from continental philosophy on the messianic, which expose the false claim that time progresses in a linear continuum, Bahr presents these philosophical positions in critical dialogue with the sayings of Jesus regarding time and time’s fulfillment. She shows how the Kingdom represents the possibilities of a disruption in time, one that reveals the intrinsic relation between God and humanity. In illustrating how Jesus’s sayings regarding time are thus expressions of his messianic identity—as of the world and not of the world--Bahr argues that the meaning of Jesus’s identity as Messiah is embedded in the disjuncture of time, in the impossibility of "now," from which the Kingdom comes . Bahr’s use of critical theory in this study expands the concept of God’s Kingdom beyond the traditional confines of the discipline.
Lynne Moss Bahr gained her PhD from Fordham University, USA and is a scholar of the New Testament and early Christianity.
AcknowledgmentsAbbreviationsChapter 1 - IntroductionChapter 2 - Continental Philosophy on the Messianic: Walter Benjamin, Jacques Derrida, and Giorgio AgambenChapter 3 - The Seed Growing Secretly: Messianic Time—Creation and SalvationChapter 4 - The Parable of the Great Feast: Hospitality, Time, and the Messianic DisruptionChapter 5 - The Parable of the Night Watchers: To Wait and Watch in the Time of the NowChapter 6 - The Things Within: Temporality and the Kingdom of GodChapter 7 - ConclusionBibliographyIndex
[Bahr's] philosophical interpretations of Jesus’ parables are striking.