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Dealing with each section of the canon, this book explains standard questions, paying special attention to where scholars agree and where they don't.
New Directions in Biblical Theology contains the papers of an international conference on Biblical Theology which was organized by the Faculty of Theology of Aarhus University on the occasion of its 50th anniversary. The papers delivered at the conference address a number of fundamental issues evolving from the recently revived debate on Biblical Theology. The first group of contributions deals with essential topics such as the biblical concept of revelation, and the interpretation of the Old Testament as presented by the apostle Paul, by the evangelists Matthew, Mark and John, and by the Letter to the Hebrews. Further contributions treat themes such as the 're-use' of a given biblical tradition, theology of creation, apocalyptic, the concept of mercy, the community's role in transmission and interpretation, and the primary aspects of the concept of God.
A provocative reader-orientated analysis of the ethical teaching of the book of Isaiah as a literary whole, examining and attempting to explain the 'double standard' that seems to exist between the conduct Yahweh demands of Israel and his own.
THE NUMBER ONE BESTSELLER * UPDATED WITH NEW REPORTING * 'It's all here in this stunning first draft of the history of the presidency of Donald Trump' Sydney Morning Herald 'An icy, Iago-like glimpse of the emotional and moral nullity that may be the source of Trump's power' Observer 'A damning, well-reported, well-sourced and clearly written haymaker' Sunday Times Drawing on nearly three years of reporting, hundreds of hours of interviews and more than two hundred sources, including some of the most senior members of the administration, friends and first-hand witnesses who have never spoken before, Philip Rucker and Carol Leonnig take us inside some of the most controversial moments of Trum...
The temptations of Jesus cast a spell on readers young and old. These temptations are macabre yet triumphant, short yet endless, ominous and dismal yet sacred and hopeful. Scholars have long been obsessed with the attempted seduction of the Saint and the successful sanitation of the Seducer. Where else but from Q could such an enchanting narrative derive? This book reviews scholarship and examines tradition history to argue that the pericope is more than a wisdom-derived scribal legitimation of the Teacher, a popular (and partially correct) theory about the story's origin and function in Q. It is a theological summit ascribing a unique sonship to Jesus. With diabolic dialogue in such sacred ...
This Congress Volume comprises not only the main lectures of the XVIth I.O.S.O.T. Congress, held in Oslo 1998, but also the interventions at the two panels on "Intertextuality and the Pluralism of Methods" and on "The Hebrew Bible and History." Both the main lectures and the panelists' interventions focus on current methodological problems and study central questions in the present study of the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament in its environment.
Preliminary material /Editors EARLY ISRAEL -- REVOLUTION AS ALTERNATIVE /G.E. Mendenhall -- IMMIGRATION OR CONQUEST /A. Alt and M. Noth -- ISRAEL IN THE PERIOD OF THE JUDGES /C. H. J. de Geus -- CONCLUSION /Editors EARLY ISRAEL -- INTRODUCTION /Editors EARLY ISRAEL -- NOMADS /N.K. Gottwald's -- FARMERS AND URBAN DWELLERS /Editors EARLY ISRAEL -- EGALITARIANISM AND SEGMENTATION /Editors EARLY ISRAEL -- SOCIAL STRUCTURE IN ISRAEL IN THE PRE-NATIONAL PERIOD /Editors EARLY ISRAEL -- THE \'PERIOD OF THE JUDGES\' AND THE ALL-ISRAELITE TRADITION /Editors EARLY ISRAEL -- ANOTHER PATH? THE FORMATION OF THE ISRAELITE HISTORICAL TRADITION /Editors EARLY ISRAEL -- FROM THE LATE BRONZE AGE TO THE EARLY IRON AGE: THE ARCHEOLOGICAL EVIDENCE /Editors EARLY ISRAEL -- CONCLUSION /Editors EARLY ISRAEL -- BIBLIOGRAPHY /Editors EARLY ISRAEL -- INDICES /Editors EARLY ISRAEL.
A defining volume of essays in which leading international scholars apply an interdisciplinary approach to the long and evolving relationship between English Literature and Theology.
How are names related to the self in the Hebrew Bible? Are names simply ornamental, or are they tied to the essence of the embodied bearer? To answer these questions, Søren Lorenzen traces various functions of proper names and explores how the lexeme "name" is conceptualized as an object to be perceived by the senses. With Paul Ricoeur as a dialogical partner, the author brings a new perspective on how the self is formed in the intentional relation between persons and name(s).