These essays help redefine the categories with which we approach apocalyptic writings and John’s Gospel. Instead of limiting the comparison to eschatology, they propose new ways to consider what each type of literature helps us see in the other. The result is not a new consensus, but a promising series of leads, which invite discussion around questions of how the hidden purposes of God are revealed.
- Craig R. Koester, Luther Seminary, Saint Paul, US, Theology
A worthy tribute to the eminent Johannine scholar, John Ashton.
The Heythrop Journal
The Fourth Gospel has a way of stopping readers in their tracks, making us question what we thought we knew, turning upside down what we took for granted. That happens to characters in its story, also—and thus, in an odd way, we find ourselves drawn into that story. Two decades ago, John Ashton did something rather similar to scholarship about the Fourth Gospel. In this book he and a goodly company of colleagues have done it again.
- Wayne A. Meeks, Yale University, USA,
In his book <i>Understanding the Fourth Gospel </i>John Ashton gave an outstanding presentation of modern research on the Gospel of John. He also gave fruitful pointers for future research, as was seen at a symposium where he and other distinguished scholars explored further his description of John’s Gospel as “an apocalypse – in reverse, upside down, inside out.” Central themes discussed were the concept of revelation, the understanding of evil, the Christological concept of Jesus as God's filial Agent, and how apocalyptic motifs find their proleptic fulfillment in Jesus’ death and resurrection. It is fortunate, indeed, that these seminal contributions now are made available in book form!
- Peder Borgen, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway,
This is the book I and many others have been waiting for, since the Gospel of John is not an obvious and immediate choice as an ‘apocalyptic Gospel’. This much needed book discusses the heuristically important links between apocalyptic and John’s Gospel, with an openness for the possibility of ‘intimations of apocalyptic’ in the Gospel. The different perspectives from which these relationships are reconsidered, illuminate the meaning and margins of apocalyptic within the Johannine context, leading to new and challenging interpretations of the Johannine material. This is certainly a book that will leave its impact on Johannine studies.
- Jan van der Watt, Radboud University Nijmegen, Netherlands,