This survey textbook offers an accessible introduction to the four Gospels in their literary, canonical, and theological contexts.
In part one, respected New Testament scholar Joshua Jipp focuses on these two What are the gospels? How did we get four canonical Gospels? In part two, Jipp explores the role that history, narrative, and theology play in our reading of the Gospels. Part three examines each of the four canonical Gospels from the perspectives of history, narrative, and theology, particularly emphasizing the role the Gospels play in discipleship.
This is the third volume in a series of survey textbooks that will cover the Old and New Testaments. Beautifully designed in full color with maps, sidebars, images, and illustrations to hold interest and aid learning, Reading the Gospels as Christian Scripture offers a faith-friendly introduction to students of the Gospels. Additional resources for instructors are available through Textbook eSources.
This is the kind of book I wish I had read when I was first studying deeper into the Gospels. It is an introduction that doesn’t get bogged down in historical details, background information, who is the author?, where did they write?, etc. (although it doesn't neglect those matters either) like other intros, but goes in depth into what matters: the literary and theological features of the Gospels, supported by those historical matters.
What sets this introduction apart is Jipp's insightful and refreshing exposition of narrative devices and themes throughout each Gospel and their theological import. I appreciated the fact that each gospel had it's own chapter focused on the implications for discpleship and spiritual formation grounded in the prior discussion of the book's content. This makes the book valuable for both the academy and the Church.
My church is in a series on the gospel of Mark leading up to Easter, in which I preached two messages, and Jipp's chapters on Mark were helpful aids in my preparation.
This book is a valuable resource for those seeking to read the Gospels more faithfully, and who are not content just to let them remain in the past or in their own heads, but seek to live them out and honor them in our own day.
In understanding and/or interpreting scripture, it is usually important to know the context in which they are written. Most of the commentaries that I have encountered spend a lot of time on the details, often debating the interpretation of the original language, marching verse by verse, chapter by chapter, book by book … rarely looking at the work as a whole. Reading the Gospels as Christian Scripture fills the gap here well, giving a brief over of how we got the Gospels in Part 1, before providing a general, historical context by which to read the Gospels in Part 2, before diving into each of the four (4) Gospels specifically in Part 3 … and it is this last part that is the best part (and accounts for nearly half of the total book … and is extremely well organized for each Gospel. Each Gospel will have an historical discussion followed by a literary analysis (structure, form, emphasis, et al) and concluding with how this view should impact living the faith of the Gospel. While perhaps not as interesting to those outside of the Christian faith, I found it to be extremely helpful to my personal growth and understanding of my faith.
The chapters and sections in this work are:
Part 1 - From Jesus of Nazareth to the Fourfold Gospel: History, Literature, Theology 1. What Are the Gospels? 2. Where Did the Gospels Come From? 3. What Are the Relationships between the Four Canonical Gospels? 4. Why Only These Four Gospels?
Part 2 - How Should We Read the Gospels? 5. Reading the Gospels in Their First Century Historical Context 6. Reading the Gospels as Narratives 7. Reading the Gospels for Transformative Discipleship
Part 3 - Reading the Gospels 8. Matthew and History 9. Matthew and Narrative (1) 10. Matthew and Narrative (2) 11. Matthew and Discipleship 12. Mark and History 13. Mark and Narrative (1) 14. Mark and Narrative (2) 15. Mark and Discipleship 16. Luke and History 17. Luke and Narrative (1) 18. Luke and Narrative (2) 19. Luke and Discipleship 20. John and History 21. John and Narrative (1) 22. John and Narrative (2) 23. John and Discipleship
Some of the other points that really got my attention are:
I was given this free advance reader copy (ARC) ebook at my request and have voluntarily left this review.
You can read a longer version of this review at SpoiledMilks (07/16/25).
Reading the Gospels as Christian Scripture by Joshua Jipp is a fresh and engaging survey textbook on the four Gospels that goes beyond repetitive discussions of the Synoptic Problem to focus on how the Gospels function both individually and together to reveal Jesus as the Son of God and call readers to discipleship. Jipp emphasizes the Gospels as ancient biographies and histories rooted in Old Testament gospel promises, crafted to transform readers into better followers of Jesus.
The book unfolds in three parts: the nature and purpose of the Gospels, principles for reading them well, and detailed studies of each Gospel’s history, narrative, and theology. Jipp highlights how each Gospel presents a unique but complementary perspective on Jesus, rooted in first-century Jewish culture and religion, and warns against forcing harmonization of differences. Instead, he invites readers to appreciate the theological and literary distinctives.
Jipp’s narrative and theological reading principles focus on the Gospels as stories inviting us to align or contrast our lives with Jesus and as God’s revelatory word calling us into practical discipleship. The book also offers rich insights into Matthew’s Torah-observant Messiah, Luke’s emphasis on divine hospitality, and the call to forgiveness and mercy.
This volume is a superb guide for students and pastors seeking to understand and live out the Gospels.
Review Disclosure: I received this book free from Baker Academic. The opinions I have expressed are my own, and I was not required to write a positive review.
This is the epitome of a textbook. Deftly written, scripturally robust, and integrative of the historical, literary, and theological aspects of the gospels, reading the gospels as Christian scripture is the book on the gospels you wish you had already read 15 years ago.