On the Resurrection, Volume 1: Evidences (Volume 1) vs Triadosis: Union with the Triune God — Interpretations of Paul’s Soteriology
Overall winner: On the Resurrection, Volume 1: Evidences (Volume 1)
Key Differences
Gary Habermas's On the Resurrection, Volume 1 is aimed at evidence-based historical apologetics and has a lower listed price and many more user reviews with a higher average rating; Eduard Borysov's Triadosis focuses on Paul’s soteriology and participationist dimensions, offering deeper theological analysis but with fewer reviews and a slightly lower rating
On the Resurrection, Volume 1: Evidences (Volume 1)
A researched volume presenting historical evidence for Jesus's resurrection, with accessible prose. Readers note its readability and thoughtful discussion value
Pros
- thoroughly researched
- historical accuracy
- evidence-based approach
- readability
Cons
- dense scholarly feel noted by some readers
Triadosis: Union with the Triune God — Interpretations of Paul’s Soteriology
Academic exploration of participationist dimensions in Paul’s soteriology. Key benefit: deeper understanding of union with God. Customer insight: mentions thoughtful interpretation
Pros
- scholarly analysis of Paul
- focus on participationist dimensions
- clear theological insights
- appropriate for study
Cons
- narrative may be dense for beginners
Head-to-Head
| Criteria | Winner |
|---|---|
| Price | Gary Habermas |
| Durability | Tie |
| Versatility | Eduard Borysov |
| User Reviews | Gary Habermas |