The City of God and the Goal of Creation - Short Studies in Biblical Theology - Paperback
T. Desmond AlexanderOriginal price was: ₹799.00.₹249.00Current price is: ₹249.00.
The City of God and the Goal of Creation by T. Desmond Alexander traces one of the Bible’s most beautiful themes: God’s plan to dwell with His people. Beginning in the Garden of Eden and ending in the glorious New Jerusalem, Alexander shows how the entire Bible points toward God’s ultimate purpose—a renewed creation where He lives with His redeemed people forever.
Part of the Short Studies in Biblical Theology Series
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From a Garden to a City — The Most Surprising Journey in the Bible
Most readers of the Bible know where the story begins: a garden, lush and perfect, where God walked with his people in the cool of the day. Fewer have noticed where the story ends: not in another garden but in a city — the New Jerusalem, coming down from heaven, blazing with the glory of God, filled with the redeemed of every nation, and echoing with the words: Behold, the dwelling place of God is with man.
The journey from garden to city is not incidental. It is the storyline of Scripture — and it is one of the most theologically rich and practically transforming themes in the entire Bible. In The City of God and the Goal of Creation, T. Desmond Alexander — one of the most respected biblical scholars of his generation — traces this journey from Genesis to Revelation, showing how God has been working throughout all of history to establish a city filled with his glorious presence and populated with his redeemed people.
This is not merely a topic for academic biblical theology. It is the vision that gives Christian hope its shape, Christian mission its direction, and Christian worship its ultimate object.
The City at the Heart of God’s Plan
Alexander begins where the theme begins — not with a city but with a garden. Eden was the first dwelling place of God with his people — a holy space where heaven and earth overlapped, where the glory of God was accessible, and where human beings were called to tend and guard the sacred ground. But Eden was not the end of God’s purposes. It was the beginning.
The expulsion from Eden was not the end of God’s dwelling-with-people project. It was its redirection. God’s response to the fall was not to abandon the project but to unfold it — through a series of covenants, a series of partial and anticipatory dwellings, and an escalating series of promises pointing toward a final, glorious, permanent city in which everything lost in the garden would be restored and surpassed.
Alexander traces this development with the precision and care of a lifelong student of the biblical text — showing how the theme of city moves through the call of Abraham (whose ultimate destination was not Canaan but a city with foundations, whose architect and builder is God), the tabernacle and temple (temporary dwelling places that pointed forward to a permanent one), the Davidic covenant (a royal city for a royal people), the prophetic visions of restoration (a transformed Jerusalem as the centre of a renewed world), and the New Testament fulfilment (the city that is already the destination of the redeemed and will one day be the dwelling place of God with his people for ever).
The New Jerusalem — Not a Return to the Garden but Something Greater
One of the most striking and theologically important points Alexander makes is that the Bible does not simply promise a return to Eden. It promises something greater. The New Jerusalem of Revelation 21–22 is not a restored garden but a city — a fully formed, mature, glorious community of redeemed people dwelling with God in a transformed creation. The garden was the beginning of something. The city is its completion.
This distinction matters enormously. It means that the goal of redemption is not merely to undo the effects of the fall but to bring God’s original purposes for creation to their intended completion — a completion that includes not just the removal of sin and death but the full flowering of human community, culture, creativity, and worship in the presence of God. The city is not a lesser thing than the garden. It is what the garden was always pointing toward.
Part of the Short Studies in Systematic Theology Series
The City of God and the Goal of Creation is part of the Short Studies in Systematic Theology series from Crossway — a collection of brief, academically rigorous, and accessible introductions to key areas of Christian theology. The series brings together trusted scholars to make serious theological study accessible for ordinary Christians and theological students without sacrificing depth or precision.
This volume functions as a biblical theology companion within the series — tracing the canonical development of a single major theme rather than working through a doctrine systematically. Read alongside other volumes in the series — including The New Creation and the Storyline of Scripture by Frank Thielman and Glorification: An Introduction by Graham Cole — it provides a rich, textually grounded account of where the whole story of Scripture is heading.
What This Book Covers
- The garden of Eden as God’s first dwelling place with his people — and why the expulsion was a redirection rather than an abandonment of his purposes
- The call of Abraham and his orientation toward a city with foundations
- The tabernacle and temple as anticipatory dwelling places pointing forward to a permanent one
- The Davidic covenant and the royal city at the heart of God’s redemptive purposes
- The prophetic visions of a restored Jerusalem as the centre of a renewed world
- The New Testament unveiling of the heavenly city and its relationship to the earthly Jerusalem
- The New Jerusalem of Revelation 21–22 — God’s dwelling with his people in a transformed creation
- The theological significance of city as the goal of creation — what it means that Scripture ends not in a garden but in a city
What Readers Will Gain
- A clear, biblically grounded, and narratively compelling understanding of the city theme as a central thread in the storyline of Scripture
- A richer reading of the whole Bible — seeing how the city theme illumines and connects passages from Genesis to Revelation that might otherwise seem unrelated
- A more concrete and biblically faithful vision of Christian hope — grounded in the New Jerusalem as God’s promised dwelling with his people
- A deeper understanding of why human community, culture, and creativity matter — as anticipations of the city that is to come
- A framework for understanding Christian mission, worship, and community as oriented toward the city of God
- A volume that works powerfully alongside other biblical theology and eschatology titles in the Short Studies in Systematic Theology series
Who Should Read This Book
- Christians who want to understand the city theme as a biblical theology thread that runs through the whole of Scripture
- Pastors and preachers wanting to open up the New Jerusalem passages of Revelation with biblical depth and canonical richness
- Theology students and seminary candidates studying biblical theology, eschatology, or the theology of creation and new creation
- Christians in India — particularly those engaged in urban ministry — for whom the vision of the city of God gives both theological grounding and missional direction
- Small group and Bible study leaders wanting a concise, accessible, and theologically serious resource on the goal of creation
- Christians working through the Short Studies in Systematic Theology series wanting a biblical theology complement to the systematic volumes
- Anyone who has read Revelation 21–22 and wanted to understand more fully what the New Jerusalem is, where it comes from in the biblical story, and what it means for Christian hope and life today
About the Author
T. Desmond Alexander is Senior Lecturer in Biblical Studies and Director of Postgraduate Studies at Union Theological College in Belfast, Northern Ireland, and one of the most respected Old Testament and biblical theology scholars in the contemporary evangelical world. He is the author of numerous widely-read works including From Eden to the New Jerusalem, The Servant King, From Paradise to the Promised Land, and a major commentary on Exodus, as well as his contribution to the acclaimed New Dictionary of Biblical Theology. His scholarship is characterised by a deep commitment to reading the whole Bible as a unified, coherent narrative — tracing the great themes of Scripture across both testaments with exegetical precision and theological sensitivity. The City of God and the Goal of Creation reflects his particular expertise in the Eden-to-New Jerusalem arc of the biblical storyline and his gift for making complex biblical theology genuinely accessible to ordinary Christian readers.
About the Short Studies in Systematic Theology Series
The City of God and the Goal of Creation is part of the Short Studies in Systematic Theology series from Crossway — a collection of brief, academically rigorous, and accessible introductions to key areas of Christian theology. Other volumes available through For The Truth include Faithful Theology and Glorification by Graham Cole, The New Creation and the Storyline of Scripture by Frank Thielman, and volumes on the attributes of God, the Trinity, and more.
- Weight : 0.201 kg
- Dimensions : 20.3 × 13 × 1.2 cm
- Format : Paperback
- ISBN : 9788195916597
- Language : English
- Pages : 192
- Publisher : FOR THE TRUTH
- Age range : 14-99
- HSN : 4901
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