A partir de esta página puede:
Volver a la pantalla de inicio con las categorías... |
Información de la editorial
Fortress Press |
Documentos disponibles de esta editorial
Refinar búsqueda
New testament narrative of John. Parte1 / Haenchen, Ernst
Título : New testament narrative of John. Parte1 Tipo de documento: texto impreso Autores: Haenchen, Ernst, Autor Editorial: Fortress Press Número de páginas: 308 páginas Nota general: <26989> Idioma : Español Clasificación: 227.87/V.5.4/T.1/(IN) Resumen: Foreword to hermeneia vii
Foreword ix
Preface xv
Reference codes
1. Sources and abbreviations xi
2. Short title xxvi
Introduction 1
1. The fourth gospel in early christian tradition 2
2. The dismantling of ancient johannine tradition by modern criticism 20
3. The text of the gospel of john 40
4. Disorder and rearrangement 44
5. The language of the gospele of john 52
6. Sources, composition, style and author 67
7. Various christologies in the gospel of john 91
Commentary
1:1-18 1. introduction to the prologue 101
Prologue 103
The pre johannine logos hymn 131
1:19-28 2. the confession of john 141
1:29-34 3. the testimony of john 150
1:35-39 4. Disciples of john go over to jesus 157
1:40-51 5. the call of the first disciples 161
2:1-12 6. the wedding at cana 169
2:13-22 7. The cleaskingof the temple 180
2:23-25 8. Jesus performs many miracles 191
3:1-21 9. Jesus and nicodemus 194
3:22-36 10. Johns humble acknowledgment of jesus 208
4:1-42 11. Jesus among the samaritans 213
4:43-54 12. The son of the royal official 232
5:1-30 13. The miracle at the pool 239
5:31-47 14. Testimony for jesus 261
6:1-15 15. The feeding of the five thousand 268
6:16-25 16. Jesus walks on water 278
6:26-59 17. Jesus discourse on the true bread from heaven 284
6:60-71 18. Jesus and the resolution of relationships 304
New testament narrative of John. Parte1 [texto impreso] / Haenchen, Ernst, Autor . - [S.l.] : Fortress Press, [s.d.] . - 308 páginas.
<26989>
Idioma : Español
Clasificación: 227.87/V.5.4/T.1/(IN) Resumen: Foreword to hermeneia vii
Foreword ix
Preface xv
Reference codes
1. Sources and abbreviations xi
2. Short title xxvi
Introduction 1
1. The fourth gospel in early christian tradition 2
2. The dismantling of ancient johannine tradition by modern criticism 20
3. The text of the gospel of john 40
4. Disorder and rearrangement 44
5. The language of the gospele of john 52
6. Sources, composition, style and author 67
7. Various christologies in the gospel of john 91
Commentary
1:1-18 1. introduction to the prologue 101
Prologue 103
The pre johannine logos hymn 131
1:19-28 2. the confession of john 141
1:29-34 3. the testimony of john 150
1:35-39 4. Disciples of john go over to jesus 157
1:40-51 5. the call of the first disciples 161
2:1-12 6. the wedding at cana 169
2:13-22 7. The cleaskingof the temple 180
2:23-25 8. Jesus performs many miracles 191
3:1-21 9. Jesus and nicodemus 194
3:22-36 10. Johns humble acknowledgment of jesus 208
4:1-42 11. Jesus among the samaritans 213
4:43-54 12. The son of the royal official 232
5:1-30 13. The miracle at the pool 239
5:31-47 14. Testimony for jesus 261
6:1-15 15. The feeding of the five thousand 268
6:16-25 16. Jesus walks on water 278
6:26-59 17. Jesus discourse on the true bread from heaven 284
6:60-71 18. Jesus and the resolution of relationships 304
Reserva
Reservar este documento
Ejemplares
Código de barras Signatura Tipo de medio Ubicación Sección Estado 26989 227.87/V.5.4/T.1/(IN) HAE Libro Biblioteca Central FTPCL Ejemplares codificados Disponible New testament narrative of John. Parte2 / Haenchen, Ernst
Título : New testament narrative of John. Parte2 Tipo de documento: texto impreso Autores: Haenchen, Ernst, Autor Editorial: Fortress Press Número de páginas: 308 páginas Nota general: <26990> Idioma : Español Clasificación: 227.87/V.5.4/T.2/(IN) Resumen: Contents John 2
Reference codes
1. Sources and abbreviations ix
2. Short title xiv
Editors note xviii
Commentary
19. Introduction to john 7 and 8 3
7:1- 13 20. Is jesus going to jerusalem 3
7:14-52 21. Jesus at the feast of tabernacles 9
7:53-8:11 22. The woman taken in adultery 21
8:12-59 23. The continuation of the discourse of jesus in jerusalem 23
9:1-41 24. The healing of the blind man 33
10:1-42 25. Jesus the good shepherd 43
11:1-4 26. The raising of lazarus 53
11:45-57 27. The sanhedrin resolves to put jesus to death 73
12:1-8 28. The anointing at bethany 82
12:9-11 29. Anticipation and menace 90
12:12-19 30. The entry into jerusalem 92
12:20-36 31. The greeks and jesus discourse on the hour of his glorification 95
12:37-50 32. The discourse of jesus (part 2) 100
13:1-30 33. The last supper 102
13:31-58 34. The love commandment 115
14:1-31 35. Jesus discourse on the situation of the disciples 119
15:1-17 36. Jesus the vine 129
15:18-27 37. The hatred of the world for the disciples 133
16:1-33 38. Conclusion of the address to the disciples 140
17:1-26 39. The high priestly prayer 147
18:1-27 40. Arrest, trial, denial 160
18:28-19:16a 41. Jesus before pilate 175
19:16b-42 42. Passion and burial 189
20:1-31 43. The appearance of jesus and the first conclusion 203
21:1-25 44. The epilogue 218
The beloved disciple 235
Ernst haenchen and his commentary on john: biographical notes and sketches of his johannine theology, by Ulrich Busse 240
Bibliography
1. General and reference 254
2. Commentaries 259
3. Studies 263
Indices
1. Passages 347
2. Foreign words 359
3. Modern authors 361
4. Subjects 364
New testament narrative of John. Parte2 [texto impreso] / Haenchen, Ernst, Autor . - [S.l.] : Fortress Press, [s.d.] . - 308 páginas.
<26990>
Idioma : Español
Clasificación: 227.87/V.5.4/T.2/(IN) Resumen: Contents John 2
Reference codes
1. Sources and abbreviations ix
2. Short title xiv
Editors note xviii
Commentary
19. Introduction to john 7 and 8 3
7:1- 13 20. Is jesus going to jerusalem 3
7:14-52 21. Jesus at the feast of tabernacles 9
7:53-8:11 22. The woman taken in adultery 21
8:12-59 23. The continuation of the discourse of jesus in jerusalem 23
9:1-41 24. The healing of the blind man 33
10:1-42 25. Jesus the good shepherd 43
11:1-4 26. The raising of lazarus 53
11:45-57 27. The sanhedrin resolves to put jesus to death 73
12:1-8 28. The anointing at bethany 82
12:9-11 29. Anticipation and menace 90
12:12-19 30. The entry into jerusalem 92
12:20-36 31. The greeks and jesus discourse on the hour of his glorification 95
12:37-50 32. The discourse of jesus (part 2) 100
13:1-30 33. The last supper 102
13:31-58 34. The love commandment 115
14:1-31 35. Jesus discourse on the situation of the disciples 119
15:1-17 36. Jesus the vine 129
15:18-27 37. The hatred of the world for the disciples 133
16:1-33 38. Conclusion of the address to the disciples 140
17:1-26 39. The high priestly prayer 147
18:1-27 40. Arrest, trial, denial 160
18:28-19:16a 41. Jesus before pilate 175
19:16b-42 42. Passion and burial 189
20:1-31 43. The appearance of jesus and the first conclusion 203
21:1-25 44. The epilogue 218
The beloved disciple 235
Ernst haenchen and his commentary on john: biographical notes and sketches of his johannine theology, by Ulrich Busse 240
Bibliography
1. General and reference 254
2. Commentaries 259
3. Studies 263
Indices
1. Passages 347
2. Foreign words 359
3. Modern authors 361
4. Subjects 364
Reserva
Reservar este documento
Ejemplares
Código de barras Signatura Tipo de medio Ubicación Sección Estado 26990 227.87/V.5.4/T.2/(IN) HAE Libro Biblioteca Central FTPCL Ejemplares codificados Disponible Epistles of Galatians / Dieter Betz, Hans
Título : Epistles of Galatians Tipo de documento: texto impreso Autores: Dieter Betz, Hans, Autor Editorial: Fortress Press Número de páginas: 308 páginas Nota general: <26988> Idioma : Español Clasificación: 227.87/V.6.4/(IN) Resumen: Foreword to Hermenencia xi
Preface xiii
Reference Code xvii
1. Abbreviations: Serial Titles, Journals, etc xvii
2. Short Titles of Works Often Cited xxiv
Editor's Note xxx
Introduction 1
1. The Author 1
2. The Addressces 1
A. Galatia And the Galatiana 1
B. The Galatian Churches 3
C. The Ant- Pauline Oppoeition 5
3. The Date of the Letter 9
A. The Historical Situation 9
B. The Chronology of Paul's Letters 11
C. The Date of Galatians 11
D. The Place from which galatians was Sent 12
4. The Text of Galatians 12
5. The Literary Composition and Function of Galatians 14
6. Traditlons and Doctrinal Presuppositions 26
7. The Theological Argunent in Galatian 28
1.1-5 I. The Epistolary Prescript 35
l:6-11 II. The Introduction (Exordium the curse in 1:8-9) 44
1:12-2:14 III. The Statement of facts (Narratio) 57
1:12 A. Thesis: Paul Received the Gospeld by Divine Revelatson, not by Human Tradition 62
Excursus: Conversion, Revelation , and tradition 64
1:13-24 B. First Part: From Paul's Birth to the Mission Asia Minor 66
Apostle 74
Cephas 76
James 78
The conference at jerusalem 81
2:1-10 C. Second Part: Pauls Second visiti in Jerusalem 83
Barnabas 84
Titus 84
John the Apostle 101
The Collection for Jerusalem 103
The Conftict at Antioch 103
The Antioch-on-the-orontes 104
2:11-14 D. Third Part: The Conflict at Antioch 105
2:15-21 IV. The Proposition (Propositio) 113
3:1-4:31 V. The Proofs (Prebatio) 128
3:1-5 A. The First Argument: The Galatians Experience of the Spirit 128
3:6-14 B. The Second Argument: God's Promise to Abraham 137
Excursus: Abraham 139
3:15-18 C. The Third Argument: Common Human Practice of Law 154
3:19-25 D. A Digression on the Jewish Torah 161
3:26-4:11 E. The Fourth Argument: Christian Tradition 181
3:26-29 1. A Reference to Baptismal Tradition 181
4:1-7 2. Proofs 202
4:8-11 3. An Interrogatie 213
4:12-20 F. The Fifth Argument: Friendship 220
4:21-31 G. The Sixth Argument : The Allegory of Sarah and Hagar 238
5:1-6:10 VI. The Exhortation (Exhortatio) 253
5:1-12 A. A Warning against Acceptance of the Jewish Torah 253
5:13-24 B. A Warning against Corruption of the "Flesh" 271
Excursus: A Catologue of Vices and Virtues 281
5:25-6:10 C. Recommendations for the Christian Life in Form of Sententios 291
6:11-18 VII. The Epistolary Postscript 312
Appendices 328
1. Josephus, jewish antiquities 20.38-48 328
2.2 Corinthians 6:14-7:1 329
3. The Kerygmata Petrou 331
a/The Epistle of Peter to James 331
b/ Pseudo-Clementine Homilies 11.35.3-6 332
C/ Pseudo-Clementine Homilies 17.13-19 332
4. Justin Martyr, Dialogue with Tryphe 46-47 334
Bibliography 336
1. Commentaries 336
2. Studies 339
Indices 41
1. Passage 341
a/ Old Testament and Apocrypha 341
b/ Old Testament Pseudepi-grapha and other Jewish Literature 341
c/New Testament 342
d/ Early Christian Literature and the Ancient Church 344
e/ Greek and Latin Authors 45
2. Greck Words 347
3. Subjects 349
4. Commentaries and Modern Authors 351
Epistles of Galatians [texto impreso] / Dieter Betz, Hans, Autor . - [S.l.] : Fortress Press, [s.d.] . - 308 páginas.
<26988>
Idioma : Español
Clasificación: 227.87/V.6.4/(IN) Resumen: Foreword to Hermenencia xi
Preface xiii
Reference Code xvii
1. Abbreviations: Serial Titles, Journals, etc xvii
2. Short Titles of Works Often Cited xxiv
Editor's Note xxx
Introduction 1
1. The Author 1
2. The Addressces 1
A. Galatia And the Galatiana 1
B. The Galatian Churches 3
C. The Ant- Pauline Oppoeition 5
3. The Date of the Letter 9
A. The Historical Situation 9
B. The Chronology of Paul's Letters 11
C. The Date of Galatians 11
D. The Place from which galatians was Sent 12
4. The Text of Galatians 12
5. The Literary Composition and Function of Galatians 14
6. Traditlons and Doctrinal Presuppositions 26
7. The Theological Argunent in Galatian 28
1.1-5 I. The Epistolary Prescript 35
l:6-11 II. The Introduction (Exordium the curse in 1:8-9) 44
1:12-2:14 III. The Statement of facts (Narratio) 57
1:12 A. Thesis: Paul Received the Gospeld by Divine Revelatson, not by Human Tradition 62
Excursus: Conversion, Revelation , and tradition 64
1:13-24 B. First Part: From Paul's Birth to the Mission Asia Minor 66
Apostle 74
Cephas 76
James 78
The conference at jerusalem 81
2:1-10 C. Second Part: Pauls Second visiti in Jerusalem 83
Barnabas 84
Titus 84
John the Apostle 101
The Collection for Jerusalem 103
The Conftict at Antioch 103
The Antioch-on-the-orontes 104
2:11-14 D. Third Part: The Conflict at Antioch 105
2:15-21 IV. The Proposition (Propositio) 113
3:1-4:31 V. The Proofs (Prebatio) 128
3:1-5 A. The First Argument: The Galatians Experience of the Spirit 128
3:6-14 B. The Second Argument: God's Promise to Abraham 137
Excursus: Abraham 139
3:15-18 C. The Third Argument: Common Human Practice of Law 154
3:19-25 D. A Digression on the Jewish Torah 161
3:26-4:11 E. The Fourth Argument: Christian Tradition 181
3:26-29 1. A Reference to Baptismal Tradition 181
4:1-7 2. Proofs 202
4:8-11 3. An Interrogatie 213
4:12-20 F. The Fifth Argument: Friendship 220
4:21-31 G. The Sixth Argument : The Allegory of Sarah and Hagar 238
5:1-6:10 VI. The Exhortation (Exhortatio) 253
5:1-12 A. A Warning against Acceptance of the Jewish Torah 253
5:13-24 B. A Warning against Corruption of the "Flesh" 271
Excursus: A Catologue of Vices and Virtues 281
5:25-6:10 C. Recommendations for the Christian Life in Form of Sententios 291
6:11-18 VII. The Epistolary Postscript 312
Appendices 328
1. Josephus, jewish antiquities 20.38-48 328
2.2 Corinthians 6:14-7:1 329
3. The Kerygmata Petrou 331
a/The Epistle of Peter to James 331
b/ Pseudo-Clementine Homilies 11.35.3-6 332
C/ Pseudo-Clementine Homilies 17.13-19 332
4. Justin Martyr, Dialogue with Tryphe 46-47 334
Bibliography 336
1. Commentaries 336
2. Studies 339
Indices 41
1. Passage 341
a/ Old Testament and Apocrypha 341
b/ Old Testament Pseudepi-grapha and other Jewish Literature 341
c/New Testament 342
d/ Early Christian Literature and the Ancient Church 344
e/ Greek and Latin Authors 45
2. Greck Words 347
3. Subjects 349
4. Commentaries and Modern Authors 351
Reserva
Reservar este documento
Ejemplares
Código de barras Signatura Tipo de medio Ubicación Sección Estado 26988 227.87/V.6.4/(IN) DIE Libro Biblioteca Central FTPCL Ejemplares codificados Disponible Epistles of Hebrews / Attridge, Harold
Título : Epistles of Hebrews Tipo de documento: texto impreso Autores: Attridge, Harold, Autor Editorial: Fortress Press Número de páginas: 308 páginas Nota general: <26991> Idioma : Español Clasificación: 227.87/V.6.14/(IN) Resumen: Contents the epistle to the Hebrews
Foreword xi
Preface xiii
Reference codes xv
1. Sources and Abbreviations xv
2. Short Titles of Commenaaries, Studies, anl Articles often cited xxiii
Editors note xxix
Introduction 1
1. Authorship 1
2. Date 6
3. Addresses 9
4. Literary characteristics of Hebrews 13
5. The Aim and Message of Hebrews 21
6. Hebrews, judaism and Early Christiany 28
7. The Text ef Hebrews 31
1:1-4 exordium 35
1:5-14 A catena of Scriptures: The Son and the Angels 49
Sunship in hebrews 54
2:1-4 paraenetic interlude: The Danger of Falling Away 63
2:5-9 the subjection and glorification of the son 69
2:10-18 High Priestly perfection through suffering 78
The christological patterns of 2:10-18 79
The language of perfection 83
The antecendents and development of the high priestly christology 97
3:1-6 The Fidelity of the Son 104
3:1-19 A Summons to Fidelity 113
4:1-11 A Summons to Fidelty (continued) 122
The image of entry into rest 126
4:12-13 a rhapsody on gods penetrating word 133
4:14-5:10 the merciful son and high priest 137
Priesthood and sonship 146
5:11 – 6: 3 Paraenesis move on to perfection 155
6:4 – 12 words of warning and hope 166
The impossibility of repentance for apostates 168
6:15-20 gods oath a confirmation of hope 178
The veil and its symbolism 184
7:1-10 melchizedek, christ and the levitical priests 186
Melchizedek 192
7:11-19 a new priest and a new order 198
Hebrews, paul and the law 204
7:20-28 the eternal high prices 206
8:1-6 the sacrifice of the heavenly high priest 216
The heavenly temple and its significance 222
8:7:13 the promise of a new convenant 225
9:1-10 the cult of the old covenant 230
The anomalies of hebrews 9:2-4 and numbers 236
9:11-14 the heavenly cult of the new covenant 244
9:15-22 the inaugural sacrifice of the new covenant 253
9:23-28 the heavenly sacrifice of the new covenant 260
10:1-10 the earthly sacrifice of the new covenant 267
10:11-18 summary the results of christs sacrifice 267
10:19-25 transitional paraenesis 283
10:26-31 a warning renewed 292
10:32-29 a renewed word of hope 297
11:1-7 an ecomium on faith 303
Faith in hebrews and contemporary literature 311
11:8-12 the faith of abraham and sarah 321
11:13-16 the heavenly homeland 328
11:17-22 faith from abraham to joseph 333
11:23-31 the faith of moses and the israelites 338
11:32-40 faith in persecution 346
12:1-3 the endurance of faith perfecter 355
12:4-13 suffering as discipline 359
12:14-17 a renewed warning 366
12:18-24 sinai and zion 371
12:25-29 a final warning 378
13:1-6 the life of peace and sanctity 384
13:7-19 true worship 390
Strange teachings and foods 394
13:20-25 benediction and farewell 404
Bibliography 413
1. Commentaries 413
2. Studies 415
Indices 425
1. Passages 425
2. Greek words 430
3. Subjects 432
4. Modern authors 433
Designers notes 438
Epistles of Hebrews [texto impreso] / Attridge, Harold, Autor . - [S.l.] : Fortress Press, [s.d.] . - 308 páginas.
<26991>
Idioma : Español
Clasificación: 227.87/V.6.14/(IN) Resumen: Contents the epistle to the Hebrews
Foreword xi
Preface xiii
Reference codes xv
1. Sources and Abbreviations xv
2. Short Titles of Commenaaries, Studies, anl Articles often cited xxiii
Editors note xxix
Introduction 1
1. Authorship 1
2. Date 6
3. Addresses 9
4. Literary characteristics of Hebrews 13
5. The Aim and Message of Hebrews 21
6. Hebrews, judaism and Early Christiany 28
7. The Text ef Hebrews 31
1:1-4 exordium 35
1:5-14 A catena of Scriptures: The Son and the Angels 49
Sunship in hebrews 54
2:1-4 paraenetic interlude: The Danger of Falling Away 63
2:5-9 the subjection and glorification of the son 69
2:10-18 High Priestly perfection through suffering 78
The christological patterns of 2:10-18 79
The language of perfection 83
The antecendents and development of the high priestly christology 97
3:1-6 The Fidelity of the Son 104
3:1-19 A Summons to Fidelity 113
4:1-11 A Summons to Fidelty (continued) 122
The image of entry into rest 126
4:12-13 a rhapsody on gods penetrating word 133
4:14-5:10 the merciful son and high priest 137
Priesthood and sonship 146
5:11 – 6: 3 Paraenesis move on to perfection 155
6:4 – 12 words of warning and hope 166
The impossibility of repentance for apostates 168
6:15-20 gods oath a confirmation of hope 178
The veil and its symbolism 184
7:1-10 melchizedek, christ and the levitical priests 186
Melchizedek 192
7:11-19 a new priest and a new order 198
Hebrews, paul and the law 204
7:20-28 the eternal high prices 206
8:1-6 the sacrifice of the heavenly high priest 216
The heavenly temple and its significance 222
8:7:13 the promise of a new convenant 225
9:1-10 the cult of the old covenant 230
The anomalies of hebrews 9:2-4 and numbers 236
9:11-14 the heavenly cult of the new covenant 244
9:15-22 the inaugural sacrifice of the new covenant 253
9:23-28 the heavenly sacrifice of the new covenant 260
10:1-10 the earthly sacrifice of the new covenant 267
10:11-18 summary the results of christs sacrifice 267
10:19-25 transitional paraenesis 283
10:26-31 a warning renewed 292
10:32-29 a renewed word of hope 297
11:1-7 an ecomium on faith 303
Faith in hebrews and contemporary literature 311
11:8-12 the faith of abraham and sarah 321
11:13-16 the heavenly homeland 328
11:17-22 faith from abraham to joseph 333
11:23-31 the faith of moses and the israelites 338
11:32-40 faith in persecution 346
12:1-3 the endurance of faith perfecter 355
12:4-13 suffering as discipline 359
12:14-17 a renewed warning 366
12:18-24 sinai and zion 371
12:25-29 a final warning 378
13:1-6 the life of peace and sanctity 384
13:7-19 true worship 390
Strange teachings and foods 394
13:20-25 benediction and farewell 404
Bibliography 413
1. Commentaries 413
2. Studies 415
Indices 425
1. Passages 425
2. Greek words 430
3. Subjects 432
4. Modern authors 433
Designers notes 438
Reserva
Reservar este documento
Ejemplares
Código de barras Signatura Tipo de medio Ubicación Sección Estado 26991 227.87/V.6.14/(IN) ATT Libro Biblioteca Central FTPCL Ejemplares codificados Disponible Prophet Hosea / Wolff, Hans Walter
Título : Prophet Hosea Tipo de documento: texto impreso Autores: Wolff, Hans Walter, Autor Editorial: Fortress Press Número de páginas: 308 páginas Nota general: <26992> Idioma : Español Clasificación: 227.87/V.4.6/(ING) Resumen: Contents
Introduction
1. The period xxi
2. The prophet himself xxi
3. The language of hosea xxiii
4. The theology of hosea xxv
5. The tranmission of hosseas prophecy xxix
The commentary
1:1 the title of the book 3
1:2-9 the prophets family as a symbol of gods judgment 7
The growth and formation of chapters 1-3 12
The sex cult 14
2:1-3 the great day of jezreel 21
2:4-17 legal proceedings against unfaithful israel 30
The baal divinities 38
The valley of achor 42
2:18-25 the day of the new covenant 46
Yahweh as baal 49
3:1-5 how yahweh love works 56
Memorabile 57
4:1-3 yahweh lawsuit against israel 65
4:4-19 a spirit of whoredom in israels workship 70
5:1-17 the teacher of the unrepentant 94
5:8-7-16 return in the midst of collpase 103
Resurrection on the third day 117
8:1-14 sow the wind and reap the whirlwind 131
The desctic function of 135
Terah in hosea 138
Guilt and sin 145
Egypt in hosea 145
9:1-9 the end of the festivals 149
9:10-17 ephraims glory has vanished 160
Israel and ephraim 164
10:1-8 shattered altars 179
10:9-15 war the fruit in falir trust 178
11:1-11 loves consequences 190
12:1-15 betrayal of the prophetic word 200
13:1-14:1 israel revolt against her leads to death 219
14:2-8 the healing of spontaneuns 231
14:10 the traditionist 239
Bibliography 242
Indices:
1. Passages
A/old testament 249
B/new testament 249
2. Hebrew words 250
3. Subjects 251
4. Modern authors 253
Designers notes 258
Prophet Hosea [texto impreso] / Wolff, Hans Walter, Autor . - [S.l.] : Fortress Press, [s.d.] . - 308 páginas.
<26992>
Idioma : Español
Clasificación: 227.87/V.4.6/(ING) Resumen: Contents
Introduction
1. The period xxi
2. The prophet himself xxi
3. The language of hosea xxiii
4. The theology of hosea xxv
5. The tranmission of hosseas prophecy xxix
The commentary
1:1 the title of the book 3
1:2-9 the prophets family as a symbol of gods judgment 7
The growth and formation of chapters 1-3 12
The sex cult 14
2:1-3 the great day of jezreel 21
2:4-17 legal proceedings against unfaithful israel 30
The baal divinities 38
The valley of achor 42
2:18-25 the day of the new covenant 46
Yahweh as baal 49
3:1-5 how yahweh love works 56
Memorabile 57
4:1-3 yahweh lawsuit against israel 65
4:4-19 a spirit of whoredom in israels workship 70
5:1-17 the teacher of the unrepentant 94
5:8-7-16 return in the midst of collpase 103
Resurrection on the third day 117
8:1-14 sow the wind and reap the whirlwind 131
The desctic function of 135
Terah in hosea 138
Guilt and sin 145
Egypt in hosea 145
9:1-9 the end of the festivals 149
9:10-17 ephraims glory has vanished 160
Israel and ephraim 164
10:1-8 shattered altars 179
10:9-15 war the fruit in falir trust 178
11:1-11 loves consequences 190
12:1-15 betrayal of the prophetic word 200
13:1-14:1 israel revolt against her leads to death 219
14:2-8 the healing of spontaneuns 231
14:10 the traditionist 239
Bibliography 242
Indices:
1. Passages
A/old testament 249
B/new testament 249
2. Hebrew words 250
3. Subjects 251
4. Modern authors 253
Designers notes 258
Reserva
Reservar este documento
Ejemplares
Código de barras Signatura Tipo de medio Ubicación Sección Estado 26992 227.87/V.4.6/(ING) WOL Libro Biblioteca Central FTPCL Ejemplares codificados Disponible Prophet Jeremiah. Parte2 / Holladay, William
Título : Prophet Jeremiah. Parte2 Tipo de documento: texto impreso Autores: Holladay, William, Autor Editorial: Fortress Press Número de páginas: 308 páginas Nota general: <26993> Idioma : Español Clasificación: 227.87/V.4.2/T.2/(ING) Prophet Jeremiah. Parte2 [texto impreso] / Holladay, William, Autor . - [S.l.] : Fortress Press, [s.d.] . - 308 páginas.
<26993>
Idioma : Español
Clasificación: 227.87/V.4.2/T.2/(ING) Reserva
Reservar este documento
Ejemplares
Código de barras Signatura Tipo de medio Ubicación Sección Estado 26993 227.87/V.4.2/T.2/(ING) HOL Libro Biblioteca Central FTPCL Ejemplares codificados Disponible Prophet Jeremiah. Parte1 / Holladay, William
Título : Prophet Jeremiah. Parte1 Tipo de documento: texto impreso Autores: Holladay, William, Autor Editorial: Fortress Press Número de páginas: 308 páginas Nota general: <26994> Idioma : Español Clasificación: 227.87/V.4.2/T.1/(ING) Prophet Jeremiah. Parte1 [texto impreso] / Holladay, William, Autor . - [S.l.] : Fortress Press, [s.d.] . - 308 páginas.
<26994>
Idioma : Español
Clasificación: 227.87/V.4.2/T.1/(ING) Reserva
Reservar este documento
Ejemplares
Código de barras Signatura Tipo de medio Ubicación Sección Estado 26994 227.87/V.4.2/T.1/(ING) HOL Libro Biblioteca Central FTPCL Ejemplares codificados Disponible Prophet Ezequiel. Parte2 / Zimmerli, Walther
Título : Prophet Ezequiel. Parte2 Tipo de documento: texto impreso Autores: Zimmerli, Walther, Autor Editorial: Fortress Press Número de páginas: 308 páginas Nota general: <26995> Idioma : Español Clasificación: 227.87/V.4.4/T.2/(ING) Resumen: Contents Ezekiel 2
Foreword to hermeneia ix
Preface to the second german edition xi
Reference codes
1. Abbreviations xix
2. Short title list xxii
Editors Note xxxiv
Commentary
25:1-32:52 oracles against seven nations and cities 3
A. Oracles against israels palestinian neighbors 25:1-28:26 5
1. Five oracles against ammon, moab, edom and the philistines 25:1-17 6
2. Three oracles against tyre and it princes 26:1-28-19 21
3. An oracle against sidon and conclusion of the oracles against israel palestinian neighbors 28:20-26 96
B. Seven oracles against pharaoh and against egypt 29:1-32:32 102
1. Three oracles concerning the judgement and its limitations against pharaoh and the land of egypt 29:1-6 106
2. Egypt: god`s substitute reward for nebuchadnezzar trouble over type 29:17-21 117
3. The day of yahweh against egypt 30:1-19 122
4. Pharaohs broken arm 30:20-26 136
5. Splendor and fall of the world tree: an image of pharaoh 31:1-18 141
6. Lament and judgement over pharaoh, the cocrodile of the seas 32:1-16 134
7. The descent to hell of egypts pomp 32:17-32 163
33:1-20 the watchman and his consolation: the freedom to repent 179
33:21-22 the news of the fall of jerusalem 191
33:23-33 against unreadiness for repentance at home and abroad 195
34:1-31 the shepherds of israel and israel as gods flock 203
35:1-36:15 judgement on mout seir and salvation for the mountains of israel 224
36:16-38 israels new life: the free gift of the god who is true to himself 241
37:1-14 the resurrection of dead israel 253
37:15-28 the two sticks 267
38:1-39:29 assault on and the end of chief prince gog of the meshech and tubal 281
40:1-48:35 the great vision of the new temple and the new land 325
A. The new temple 40:1-42:20 329
1. The visionary guidance of the prophet from the east gate to the threshold of the holy of holies 40:1-37, 47-49, 41:1-4 330
2. To additions about the chambers in the inner north and south gates 40:38-46 363
3. The annexes of the temple and its surroundings: the area to the west behind the temple 41:5-15a 370
4. Wall decoration and interior furnishing of the temple 41:15b-21 383
5. The great priestly vestries 42:1-14 392
6. The conclusion of the measuring of the temple area 42:15-20 402
B. The entry of yahweh into his sanctuary and the new ordinances fort he prince, the priests and the people 43:1-46-24 406
1. Yahwehs entry into his sanctuary 43:1-12 407
2. A double addition. The altar and its consecration 43:13-27 422
3. The closed outer east gate 44:1-3 437
4. Renewed encounter with god and a commission 44:4-5 443
5. Levites and priests 44:6-31 446
6. A supplement to the property rights of the levites and priests within the consecrated area 45:1-8 465
7. An admonition to the princes of israel 45:9 471
8. Right measures and right offerings 45:10-17 473
9. The great festivals and the princes offering 45:18-25 480
10. Gate ordinances for prince and people and the princes minor offerings with an appendix on the tamid 46:1-15 487
11. An appendix on the inalienable nature of the princes property 46:16-18 495
12. An appendix to the description of the temple the sacrificial kitchens 46:19-24 498
C. The land around the new sanctuary 47:1-48-35 503
1. The temple stream 47:1-12 504
2. The new allocation of land 47:13-48:29 517
3. The city ans its gates 48:30-35 544
Appendices
1. The divine name in the book of ezekiel 556
2. Israel in the book of ezekiel 563
3. In the book of ezekiel 566
Bibliography 569
Indices
1. Passages 591
2. Hebrew words 600
3. Names and subjects 602
Prophet Ezequiel. Parte2 [texto impreso] / Zimmerli, Walther, Autor . - [S.l.] : Fortress Press, [s.d.] . - 308 páginas.
<26995>
Idioma : Español
Clasificación: 227.87/V.4.4/T.2/(ING) Resumen: Contents Ezekiel 2
Foreword to hermeneia ix
Preface to the second german edition xi
Reference codes
1. Abbreviations xix
2. Short title list xxii
Editors Note xxxiv
Commentary
25:1-32:52 oracles against seven nations and cities 3
A. Oracles against israels palestinian neighbors 25:1-28:26 5
1. Five oracles against ammon, moab, edom and the philistines 25:1-17 6
2. Three oracles against tyre and it princes 26:1-28-19 21
3. An oracle against sidon and conclusion of the oracles against israel palestinian neighbors 28:20-26 96
B. Seven oracles against pharaoh and against egypt 29:1-32:32 102
1. Three oracles concerning the judgement and its limitations against pharaoh and the land of egypt 29:1-6 106
2. Egypt: god`s substitute reward for nebuchadnezzar trouble over type 29:17-21 117
3. The day of yahweh against egypt 30:1-19 122
4. Pharaohs broken arm 30:20-26 136
5. Splendor and fall of the world tree: an image of pharaoh 31:1-18 141
6. Lament and judgement over pharaoh, the cocrodile of the seas 32:1-16 134
7. The descent to hell of egypts pomp 32:17-32 163
33:1-20 the watchman and his consolation: the freedom to repent 179
33:21-22 the news of the fall of jerusalem 191
33:23-33 against unreadiness for repentance at home and abroad 195
34:1-31 the shepherds of israel and israel as gods flock 203
35:1-36:15 judgement on mout seir and salvation for the mountains of israel 224
36:16-38 israels new life: the free gift of the god who is true to himself 241
37:1-14 the resurrection of dead israel 253
37:15-28 the two sticks 267
38:1-39:29 assault on and the end of chief prince gog of the meshech and tubal 281
40:1-48:35 the great vision of the new temple and the new land 325
A. The new temple 40:1-42:20 329
1. The visionary guidance of the prophet from the east gate to the threshold of the holy of holies 40:1-37, 47-49, 41:1-4 330
2. To additions about the chambers in the inner north and south gates 40:38-46 363
3. The annexes of the temple and its surroundings: the area to the west behind the temple 41:5-15a 370
4. Wall decoration and interior furnishing of the temple 41:15b-21 383
5. The great priestly vestries 42:1-14 392
6. The conclusion of the measuring of the temple area 42:15-20 402
B. The entry of yahweh into his sanctuary and the new ordinances fort he prince, the priests and the people 43:1-46-24 406
1. Yahwehs entry into his sanctuary 43:1-12 407
2. A double addition. The altar and its consecration 43:13-27 422
3. The closed outer east gate 44:1-3 437
4. Renewed encounter with god and a commission 44:4-5 443
5. Levites and priests 44:6-31 446
6. A supplement to the property rights of the levites and priests within the consecrated area 45:1-8 465
7. An admonition to the princes of israel 45:9 471
8. Right measures and right offerings 45:10-17 473
9. The great festivals and the princes offering 45:18-25 480
10. Gate ordinances for prince and people and the princes minor offerings with an appendix on the tamid 46:1-15 487
11. An appendix on the inalienable nature of the princes property 46:16-18 495
12. An appendix to the description of the temple the sacrificial kitchens 46:19-24 498
C. The land around the new sanctuary 47:1-48-35 503
1. The temple stream 47:1-12 504
2. The new allocation of land 47:13-48:29 517
3. The city ans its gates 48:30-35 544
Appendices
1. The divine name in the book of ezekiel 556
2. Israel in the book of ezekiel 563
3. In the book of ezekiel 566
Bibliography 569
Indices
1. Passages 591
2. Hebrew words 600
3. Names and subjects 602
Reserva
Reservar este documento
Ejemplares
Código de barras Signatura Tipo de medio Ubicación Sección Estado 26995 227.87/V.4.4/T.2/(ING) ZIM Libro Biblioteca Central FTPCL Ejemplares codificados Disponible Prophet Ezequiel. Parte1 / Zimmerli, Walther
Título : Prophet Ezequiel. Parte1 Tipo de documento: texto impreso Autores: Zimmerli, Walther, Autor Editorial: Fortress Press Número de páginas: 308 páginas Nota general: <26996> Idioma : Español Clasificación: 227.87/V.4.4/T.1/(ING) Resumen: Contents
Ezekiel 1
Foreword to hermeneia xi
Foreword to the german edition xiii
Reference codes
1. Abbreviations xv
2. Short tide list xviii
3. Bibliography xxviii
Note on endpapers xlvi
Introduction 1
1. The contents of the book of ezekiel 1
2. Critical work on the book of ezekiel 3
3. The date and historical blackground of the book of ezekiel 9
4. The personality of ezekiel 16
5. The language and form of the prophecies of the book ezekiel 21
A. Notes on the vocubalary and language of the boook of ezekiel 21
B. The form of the book as a whole 24
C. The form of the prophetic
Speeches 25
Formulas 26
Visions 27
Sign – actions 28
Gestures and expressive actions 29
Speeches using a figure 30
(legal accusations, fables of animals and plants, laments for the dead) 31
Work- song 32
Historico – theological narrative 33
Casuistic schematizing 33
Sermon against classes of the people 33
Thematically arranged sections 34
Legal sayings 34
Rituals, priestly regulations, sacrificial rules, boundary descriptions 35
Disputation oracle (argument) 36
Quoatations 36
Oaths 36
Proof of identity sayings 36
Metrical structure 40
6. The tradition historical and literary critical background of the book of ezekiel 41
A. The election traditions 41
B. The place of ezekiel within the prophetic tradition 42
C. The relationshitp to earlier
Written prophecy 43
Amos 44
Hosea 44
Isaiah 44
Zephaniah 44
Jeremiah 44
D. The legal collections 46
Deuteronomy 46
The holiness code 46
The priestly document 52
7. The message of ezekiel 52
A. Yahwch and his appearing 52
B. The prophet and his office 54
C. The prophetic announcement of woe to israel 56
1. The announcement of judgement 56
2. The accusation 57
D. The proclamation of judgement against the nations 60
E. The prophetic annoucement of salvation for israel 62
F. Gog of magog 65
G. The call to return in the situation of judgement 66
8. From the prophets word to the prophetic book 68
A. Oral and written addresses 68
B. The development of tradition in the school of ezekiel 68
9. The later history of the book and its text 74
A. Canonization 74
B. Text and versions 75
Commentary
1:1-3-15 the call 81
3:16b-21 the office of watchman 142
3: 16a, 22-3:17 the siege of jerusalem and the exile of israel in the prophetic sign action 147
A. The situation 3:16a, 22-24a 157
B. Yahwehs message to the prophet 3:24b-5:4a 158
The sign action of besieging the city 4:1-3 161
The prophet bears the guilt of israel (and judah) 4:4-8 163
The scarcity of food during the siege 4:9-11 168
The unclean food 4:12-15 170
The divine shaving 5:1-4a 172
C. The commission to preach to the house of israel 5:4a-17 174
6:1-14 Death upon the mountains of israel 179
7:1-27 the bitter day of the end 193
8:1 11:25 the great vision of the sinful worship in jerusalem and its judgement 215
The editorial work in ezek 8-11 assimilating it to the call theophany 253
Those who remained and those who went into exile 256
The annoucement of judgement upon those who were left in the land 257
The divine word of grace to those in exile 260
12:1 –16 the exile`s baggage, a sign for the blind 265
12:17-20 the trembling of the prophet a sign from god 276
12:21-25 yahweh word does not fail 279
12:26-28 gods word does not refer to distant days 283
13:1-23 against the false prophets and prophetesses 285
14:1-11 the prophet and the worshippers of idols 300
14:12-23 the inevitability of the divine judgement 310
15:1-8 the useless vine 317
16:1-63 the unfaithful wife 322
17:1-24 the eagle, the cedar and the vine (zedekiah breach of covenan) 354
18:1-32 the freedom to repent 369
19:1-14 the lament over the lioness and over the vine (the end of the judaen royal house) 388
20:1-44 the sinful history of the people of israel who were brought out of egypt. The judgement and salvation of the second exodus 399
21:1-37 three sayings about the sword 419
A. The sword of yahweh 21:1-2 420
B. The sword 21:13-22 436
C. The sword of the king of babylon 21:23-37 436
22:1-16 the city of blood 452
22:17-22 israel in the smelting oven 461
22:23-31 survery of the corruption of all classes in the land 465
23:1-49 oholah and oholibah 471
24:1-14 the cauldron of the fire 493
24:15-27 the prophets grief over the death of his wife, a sign of grief over the fall of jerusalem 502
Prophet Ezequiel. Parte1 [texto impreso] / Zimmerli, Walther, Autor . - [S.l.] : Fortress Press, [s.d.] . - 308 páginas.
<26996>
Idioma : Español
Clasificación: 227.87/V.4.4/T.1/(ING) Resumen: Contents
Ezekiel 1
Foreword to hermeneia xi
Foreword to the german edition xiii
Reference codes
1. Abbreviations xv
2. Short tide list xviii
3. Bibliography xxviii
Note on endpapers xlvi
Introduction 1
1. The contents of the book of ezekiel 1
2. Critical work on the book of ezekiel 3
3. The date and historical blackground of the book of ezekiel 9
4. The personality of ezekiel 16
5. The language and form of the prophecies of the book ezekiel 21
A. Notes on the vocubalary and language of the boook of ezekiel 21
B. The form of the book as a whole 24
C. The form of the prophetic
Speeches 25
Formulas 26
Visions 27
Sign – actions 28
Gestures and expressive actions 29
Speeches using a figure 30
(legal accusations, fables of animals and plants, laments for the dead) 31
Work- song 32
Historico – theological narrative 33
Casuistic schematizing 33
Sermon against classes of the people 33
Thematically arranged sections 34
Legal sayings 34
Rituals, priestly regulations, sacrificial rules, boundary descriptions 35
Disputation oracle (argument) 36
Quoatations 36
Oaths 36
Proof of identity sayings 36
Metrical structure 40
6. The tradition historical and literary critical background of the book of ezekiel 41
A. The election traditions 41
B. The place of ezekiel within the prophetic tradition 42
C. The relationshitp to earlier
Written prophecy 43
Amos 44
Hosea 44
Isaiah 44
Zephaniah 44
Jeremiah 44
D. The legal collections 46
Deuteronomy 46
The holiness code 46
The priestly document 52
7. The message of ezekiel 52
A. Yahwch and his appearing 52
B. The prophet and his office 54
C. The prophetic announcement of woe to israel 56
1. The announcement of judgement 56
2. The accusation 57
D. The proclamation of judgement against the nations 60
E. The prophetic annoucement of salvation for israel 62
F. Gog of magog 65
G. The call to return in the situation of judgement 66
8. From the prophets word to the prophetic book 68
A. Oral and written addresses 68
B. The development of tradition in the school of ezekiel 68
9. The later history of the book and its text 74
A. Canonization 74
B. Text and versions 75
Commentary
1:1-3-15 the call 81
3:16b-21 the office of watchman 142
3: 16a, 22-3:17 the siege of jerusalem and the exile of israel in the prophetic sign action 147
A. The situation 3:16a, 22-24a 157
B. Yahwehs message to the prophet 3:24b-5:4a 158
The sign action of besieging the city 4:1-3 161
The prophet bears the guilt of israel (and judah) 4:4-8 163
The scarcity of food during the siege 4:9-11 168
The unclean food 4:12-15 170
The divine shaving 5:1-4a 172
C. The commission to preach to the house of israel 5:4a-17 174
6:1-14 Death upon the mountains of israel 179
7:1-27 the bitter day of the end 193
8:1 11:25 the great vision of the sinful worship in jerusalem and its judgement 215
The editorial work in ezek 8-11 assimilating it to the call theophany 253
Those who remained and those who went into exile 256
The annoucement of judgement upon those who were left in the land 257
The divine word of grace to those in exile 260
12:1 –16 the exile`s baggage, a sign for the blind 265
12:17-20 the trembling of the prophet a sign from god 276
12:21-25 yahweh word does not fail 279
12:26-28 gods word does not refer to distant days 283
13:1-23 against the false prophets and prophetesses 285
14:1-11 the prophet and the worshippers of idols 300
14:12-23 the inevitability of the divine judgement 310
15:1-8 the useless vine 317
16:1-63 the unfaithful wife 322
17:1-24 the eagle, the cedar and the vine (zedekiah breach of covenan) 354
18:1-32 the freedom to repent 369
19:1-14 the lament over the lioness and over the vine (the end of the judaen royal house) 388
20:1-44 the sinful history of the people of israel who were brought out of egypt. The judgement and salvation of the second exodus 399
21:1-37 three sayings about the sword 419
A. The sword of yahweh 21:1-2 420
B. The sword 21:13-22 436
C. The sword of the king of babylon 21:23-37 436
22:1-16 the city of blood 452
22:17-22 israel in the smelting oven 461
22:23-31 survery of the corruption of all classes in the land 465
23:1-49 oholah and oholibah 471
24:1-14 the cauldron of the fire 493
24:15-27 the prophets grief over the death of his wife, a sign of grief over the fall of jerusalem 502
Reserva
Reservar este documento
Ejemplares
Código de barras Signatura Tipo de medio Ubicación Sección Estado 26996 227.87/V.4.4/T.1/(ING) ZIM Libro Biblioteca Central FTPCL Ejemplares codificados Disponible Early Christianity according to the traditions in Acts a commentary / Lüdermann, Gerd
Título : Early Christianity according to the traditions in Acts a commentary Tipo de documento: texto impreso Autores: Lüdermann, Gerd, Autor Editorial: Fortress Press Número de páginas: 283 páginas ISBN/ISSN/DL: 978-0-8006-2314-2 Nota general: <27002> Idioma : Inglés Clasificación: 226.6/L47/(ING) Early Christianity according to the traditions in Acts a commentary [texto impreso] / Lüdermann, Gerd, Autor . - [S.l.] : Fortress Press, [s.d.] . - 283 páginas.
ISBN : 978-0-8006-2314-2
<27002>
Idioma : Inglés
Clasificación: 226.6/L47/(ING) Reserva
Reservar este documento
Ejemplares
Código de barras Signatura Tipo de medio Ubicación Sección Estado 27002 226.6/L47/(ING) LUD Libro Biblioteca Central FTPCL Ejemplares codificados Disponible Documents for the study of the gospels / Cartlidge, David
Título : Documents for the study of the gospels Tipo de documento: texto impreso Autores: Cartlidge, David, Autor Editorial: Fortress Press Número de páginas: 298 páginas ISBN/ISSN/DL: 978-0-8006-1640-5 Nota general: <27025> Idioma : Español Clasificación: 226.17/C32/(ING) Resumen: Preface – 9
Note on the transalations – 11
Introduction savior gods in the Mediterranean world – 13
Part 1: The Christian savior – 23
The Coptic gospel of Thomas – 36
The acts of the holy apostle thomas – 36
Jesus after the resurrection – 55
The gospel of peter – 83
A letter from pilate to Claudius - 87
And the trial of pilate in rome –
Jesus medical correspondence with king abgar – 91
The infancy gospel of Thomas – 92
The gospel of pseudo matthew – 98
The birth of jesus – 104
The gospel of james – 107
Part 2: Greek, jewish, and roman
Parallels illustrating the milieu of the gospels – 119
Prefaces
The sacred history of asklepios – 121
Two prefaces from flavius arrian – 125
Isocrates, evagoras – 126
Birth and Youth
The Birth of Plato - 129
The Birth of Plato - 130
The Birth of Alexander the Great - 131
The Birth of Augustus - 132
The Birth and childhood of Pythagoras – 134
The Birh of Herakles – 135
Teachings
Aesop´s fables – 137
Rabbinic Parables – 140
Sayings of thales, aristippos, and Aristotle – 141
Sayings of alexander and others – 143
Epictetus – 145
Two stories from Epictetus – 148
Miracles
Asklepios – 151
Pythagoras – 154
Vespasian – 156
A Syrian exorcist – 157
Chanina ben dosa – 158
A Jewish boy calms the sea – 160
The rabbis reject miracles – 160
The murder of Julius caesar – 163
The wine miracle of dionysos – 165
Sacraments
The salvation of Lucius – 167
The messianic banquet at Qumran – 171
Apocalyptic predictions
2 esdras 11, 13 – 173
A Roman Messianic Prophecy – 177
The footsteps of the Messiah – 180
Martyrdom
Zeno – 181
Eleazar – 182
Rabbi akiba – 184
Ascension
Romulus – 187
The dream of scipio – 190
Apotheosis of antinous – 197
Herakles – 201
Part 3: Greek and Jewish Gospels
The life apollonios of tyana; flavius Philostratus – 205
Poimandres; the hermetic tractates – 243
The life of moses; philo of Alexandria – 253
Alexander the false prophet, Lucian of Samosata - 293
Documents for the study of the gospels [texto impreso] / Cartlidge, David, Autor . - [S.l.] : Fortress Press, [s.d.] . - 298 páginas.
ISSN : 978-0-8006-1640-5
<27025>
Idioma : Español
Clasificación: 226.17/C32/(ING) Resumen: Preface – 9
Note on the transalations – 11
Introduction savior gods in the Mediterranean world – 13
Part 1: The Christian savior – 23
The Coptic gospel of Thomas – 36
The acts of the holy apostle thomas – 36
Jesus after the resurrection – 55
The gospel of peter – 83
A letter from pilate to Claudius - 87
And the trial of pilate in rome –
Jesus medical correspondence with king abgar – 91
The infancy gospel of Thomas – 92
The gospel of pseudo matthew – 98
The birth of jesus – 104
The gospel of james – 107
Part 2: Greek, jewish, and roman
Parallels illustrating the milieu of the gospels – 119
Prefaces
The sacred history of asklepios – 121
Two prefaces from flavius arrian – 125
Isocrates, evagoras – 126
Birth and Youth
The Birth of Plato - 129
The Birth of Plato - 130
The Birth of Alexander the Great - 131
The Birth of Augustus - 132
The Birth and childhood of Pythagoras – 134
The Birh of Herakles – 135
Teachings
Aesop´s fables – 137
Rabbinic Parables – 140
Sayings of thales, aristippos, and Aristotle – 141
Sayings of alexander and others – 143
Epictetus – 145
Two stories from Epictetus – 148
Miracles
Asklepios – 151
Pythagoras – 154
Vespasian – 156
A Syrian exorcist – 157
Chanina ben dosa – 158
A Jewish boy calms the sea – 160
The rabbis reject miracles – 160
The murder of Julius caesar – 163
The wine miracle of dionysos – 165
Sacraments
The salvation of Lucius – 167
The messianic banquet at Qumran – 171
Apocalyptic predictions
2 esdras 11, 13 – 173
A Roman Messianic Prophecy – 177
The footsteps of the Messiah – 180
Martyrdom
Zeno – 181
Eleazar – 182
Rabbi akiba – 184
Ascension
Romulus – 187
The dream of scipio – 190
Apotheosis of antinous – 197
Herakles – 201
Part 3: Greek and Jewish Gospels
The life apollonios of tyana; flavius Philostratus – 205
Poimandres; the hermetic tractates – 243
The life of moses; philo of Alexandria – 253
Alexander the false prophet, Lucian of Samosata - 293
Reserva
Reservar este documento
Ejemplares
Código de barras Signatura Tipo de medio Ubicación Sección Estado 27025 226.17/C32/(ING) CAR Libro Biblioteca Central FTPCL Ejemplares codificados Disponible Old testament theology in a canonical context / Childs, Brevard
Título : Old testament theology in a canonical context Tipo de documento: texto impreso Autores: Childs, Brevard, Autor Mención de edición: 1° Editorial: Fortress Press Fecha de publicación: 1986 Número de páginas: 255 páginas ISBN/ISSN/DL: 978-0-8006-0772-3 Nota general: <27024> Idioma : Inglés Clasificación: 221/CH53/(ING) Resumen: Preface xiii
Abbreviations xv
1 INTRODUCTION TO OLD TESTAMENT THEOLOGY 1
(i) The present task 1
(ii) A survey of the history of the discipline 2
(iii) Continuing problems 4
(iv) A canonical approach to Old Testament 6
(v) Canonical approach and the modern debate 15
(vi) The importance of Old Testament theology 17
2 THE OLD TESTAMENT AS REVELATION 20
(i) The criticism of analytical philosophy 20
(ii) The criticism of sociological analysis 24
3 HOW GOD IS KNOWN 28
(i) Introduction 28
(ii) God is known through creation 30
(iii) Revelation through wisdom 34
(iv) Revelation through history 36
(v) Revelation through the name 38
(vi) Is the God of the Old Testament a male deity? 39
(vii) Characteristic features of God's self-disclosure 41
4 GOD'S PURPOSE IN REVELATION 43
(i) The goal of self-disclosure 43
(ii) The obscuring of God's will 46
(iii) The eschatological restoration of his purpose 48
5 THE LAW OF GOD 51
(i) The knowledge and will of God 51
(ii) The divine imperative 51
(iii) God's will and its realization 52
(iv) The canonical shape of the Sinai witness 53
(v) Theological implications of the Law 56
6 KNOWING AND DOING THE WILL OF GOD 58
(i) The dialectical poles 58
(ii) Contextual illustrations 60
7 THE THEOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF
THE DECALOGUE 63
The prologue 64
(i) You shall have no other gods before me 65
(ii) You shall not make yourself an image! 66
(iii) You shall not take the name of the Lord,
your God, in vain 68
(iv) Remember the sabbath to keep it holy' 70
(v) 'Honour your father and mother that your
days may be long in the land 72
(vi) You shall not kill' 74
(vii) You shall not commit adultery' 79
(viii) 'You shall not steal'/(x) You shall not covet 81
(ix) You shall not bear false witness against
your neighbor 82
8 THE ROLE OF THE RITUAL AND PURITY LAWS 84
(i) The scope of the subject 84
(ii) Problems of method 85
(iii) Towards a canonical interpretation 86
9 THE RECIPIENTS OF GOD'S REVELATION 92
(i) Israel as God's chosen people 93
(ii) The individual as recipient 97
(a) The individual as representative of humanity 97
(b) The individual as representative of Israel 99
(iii) The nations as recipients of God's revelation 103
10 AGENTS OF GOD'S RULE: MOSES, JUDGES, KINGS 108
(i) The role of Moses 108
(ii) Judges 112
(iii) Kings 115
(a) The rise of the kingdom 115
(b) Saul 117
(c) David 117
(d) The messianic hope 119
11 THE OFFICE AND FUNCTION OF THE PROPHET 122
(i) Methodological issues 122
(ii) The theological role of the prophets 123
(iii) The prophetic promise 128
12 TRUE AND FALSE PROPHETS 133
(i) The scarch for biblical criteria 133
(i) The case of Jeremiah and Hananiah 135
(iii) The effect of the canonical shaping 140
(iv) I Kings 13 142
13 THE THEOLOGICAL ROLE OF PRIESTHOOD 145
(i) The nature of the critical problem 145
(ii) Towards a canonical construal of the priesthood 149
(iii) Summary of the theology of priesthood 152
14 BENEFITS OF THE COVENANT. THE CULTUS 155
(i) Methodological issues 155
(ii) The canonical shape of Leviticus 156
(iii) The sacred dimension of reality 161
(a) Sacred times the festivals 162
(b) Sacred space tabernacle and temple 163
(c) Sacred objects 165
(d) Sacred personnel 166
(iv) The cult as blessing 167
(v) Sacrifice and atonement 168
(vi) The palms and the cult 171
(vii) The prophets and the cult 172
15 STRUCTURES OF THE COMMON LIFE 175
(i) The modern debate 175
(ii) A theological interpretation of Israel's institutions 177
(a) Civil institutions 178
(b) Class structure 181
(c) Legal institutions 182
(d) Military institutions 184
(e) Family Institutions 185
16 MALE AND FEMALE AS A THEOLOGICAL PROBLEM 188
(i) Male and female in Genesis 1-3 182
(ii) Male and female in the Song of Songs 192
17 THE THEOLOGICAL DIMENSION OF BEING HUMAN 196
(i) Introduction 196
(ii) Canonical indices within the tradition 197
(iii) Theological reflections on Old Testament
anthropology 199
THE SHAPE OF THE OBEDIENT LIFE 204
(i) A review of some theological approaches 204
(ii) Canonical guidelines to Israel's response 207
(a) The Psalter 207
(b) Wisdom 210
(c) The Pentateuch 212
(iii) Theological reflections in a canonical context 214
(a) The Psalter 214
(b) The prophets 217
(c) The histories and the writings 217
(d) The patriarchal narratives 218
(iv) Summary 220
19 LIFE UNDER THREAT 222
(i) The primaeval threat, Genesis 1-11 222
(ii) Covenant and curse 226
(iii) Prophets 228
(iv) Daniel and apocalyptic 230
(v) The Psalms, de profundis 231
(vi) Wisdom 232
(vii) The limits of the threat 232
(viii) Summary 234
20 LIFE UNDER PROMISE 236
(i) The scope of the material 236
(ii) Methodological issues 237
(iii) Patterns of canonical shaping 238
(iv) Forms of the promise 240
(a) Judgment and salvation 240
(b) The messianic kingdom and its messiah 241
(c) The land 242
(d) Eternal life 245
Index of Authors 248
Index of Biblical References 254
Old testament theology in a canonical context [texto impreso] / Childs, Brevard, Autor . - 1° . - [S.l.] : Fortress Press, 1986 . - 255 páginas.
ISSN : 978-0-8006-0772-3
<27024>
Idioma : Inglés
Clasificación: 221/CH53/(ING) Resumen: Preface xiii
Abbreviations xv
1 INTRODUCTION TO OLD TESTAMENT THEOLOGY 1
(i) The present task 1
(ii) A survey of the history of the discipline 2
(iii) Continuing problems 4
(iv) A canonical approach to Old Testament 6
(v) Canonical approach and the modern debate 15
(vi) The importance of Old Testament theology 17
2 THE OLD TESTAMENT AS REVELATION 20
(i) The criticism of analytical philosophy 20
(ii) The criticism of sociological analysis 24
3 HOW GOD IS KNOWN 28
(i) Introduction 28
(ii) God is known through creation 30
(iii) Revelation through wisdom 34
(iv) Revelation through history 36
(v) Revelation through the name 38
(vi) Is the God of the Old Testament a male deity? 39
(vii) Characteristic features of God's self-disclosure 41
4 GOD'S PURPOSE IN REVELATION 43
(i) The goal of self-disclosure 43
(ii) The obscuring of God's will 46
(iii) The eschatological restoration of his purpose 48
5 THE LAW OF GOD 51
(i) The knowledge and will of God 51
(ii) The divine imperative 51
(iii) God's will and its realization 52
(iv) The canonical shape of the Sinai witness 53
(v) Theological implications of the Law 56
6 KNOWING AND DOING THE WILL OF GOD 58
(i) The dialectical poles 58
(ii) Contextual illustrations 60
7 THE THEOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF
THE DECALOGUE 63
The prologue 64
(i) You shall have no other gods before me 65
(ii) You shall not make yourself an image! 66
(iii) You shall not take the name of the Lord,
your God, in vain 68
(iv) Remember the sabbath to keep it holy' 70
(v) 'Honour your father and mother that your
days may be long in the land 72
(vi) You shall not kill' 74
(vii) You shall not commit adultery' 79
(viii) 'You shall not steal'/(x) You shall not covet 81
(ix) You shall not bear false witness against
your neighbor 82
8 THE ROLE OF THE RITUAL AND PURITY LAWS 84
(i) The scope of the subject 84
(ii) Problems of method 85
(iii) Towards a canonical interpretation 86
9 THE RECIPIENTS OF GOD'S REVELATION 92
(i) Israel as God's chosen people 93
(ii) The individual as recipient 97
(a) The individual as representative of humanity 97
(b) The individual as representative of Israel 99
(iii) The nations as recipients of God's revelation 103
10 AGENTS OF GOD'S RULE: MOSES, JUDGES, KINGS 108
(i) The role of Moses 108
(ii) Judges 112
(iii) Kings 115
(a) The rise of the kingdom 115
(b) Saul 117
(c) David 117
(d) The messianic hope 119
11 THE OFFICE AND FUNCTION OF THE PROPHET 122
(i) Methodological issues 122
(ii) The theological role of the prophets 123
(iii) The prophetic promise 128
12 TRUE AND FALSE PROPHETS 133
(i) The scarch for biblical criteria 133
(i) The case of Jeremiah and Hananiah 135
(iii) The effect of the canonical shaping 140
(iv) I Kings 13 142
13 THE THEOLOGICAL ROLE OF PRIESTHOOD 145
(i) The nature of the critical problem 145
(ii) Towards a canonical construal of the priesthood 149
(iii) Summary of the theology of priesthood 152
14 BENEFITS OF THE COVENANT. THE CULTUS 155
(i) Methodological issues 155
(ii) The canonical shape of Leviticus 156
(iii) The sacred dimension of reality 161
(a) Sacred times the festivals 162
(b) Sacred space tabernacle and temple 163
(c) Sacred objects 165
(d) Sacred personnel 166
(iv) The cult as blessing 167
(v) Sacrifice and atonement 168
(vi) The palms and the cult 171
(vii) The prophets and the cult 172
15 STRUCTURES OF THE COMMON LIFE 175
(i) The modern debate 175
(ii) A theological interpretation of Israel's institutions 177
(a) Civil institutions 178
(b) Class structure 181
(c) Legal institutions 182
(d) Military institutions 184
(e) Family Institutions 185
16 MALE AND FEMALE AS A THEOLOGICAL PROBLEM 188
(i) Male and female in Genesis 1-3 182
(ii) Male and female in the Song of Songs 192
17 THE THEOLOGICAL DIMENSION OF BEING HUMAN 196
(i) Introduction 196
(ii) Canonical indices within the tradition 197
(iii) Theological reflections on Old Testament
anthropology 199
THE SHAPE OF THE OBEDIENT LIFE 204
(i) A review of some theological approaches 204
(ii) Canonical guidelines to Israel's response 207
(a) The Psalter 207
(b) Wisdom 210
(c) The Pentateuch 212
(iii) Theological reflections in a canonical context 214
(a) The Psalter 214
(b) The prophets 217
(c) The histories and the writings 217
(d) The patriarchal narratives 218
(iv) Summary 220
19 LIFE UNDER THREAT 222
(i) The primaeval threat, Genesis 1-11 222
(ii) Covenant and curse 226
(iii) Prophets 228
(iv) Daniel and apocalyptic 230
(v) The Psalms, de profundis 231
(vi) Wisdom 232
(vii) The limits of the threat 232
(viii) Summary 234
20 LIFE UNDER PROMISE 236
(i) The scope of the material 236
(ii) Methodological issues 237
(iii) Patterns of canonical shaping 238
(iv) Forms of the promise 240
(a) Judgment and salvation 240
(b) The messianic kingdom and its messiah 241
(c) The land 242
(d) Eternal life 245
Index of Authors 248
Index of Biblical References 254
Reserva
Reservar este documento
Ejemplares
Código de barras Signatura Tipo de medio Ubicación Sección Estado 27024 221/CH53/(ING) CHI Libro Biblioteca Central FTPCL Ejemplares codificados Disponible Introduction to the old testament as scripture / Childs, Brevard
Título : Introduction to the old testament as scripture Tipo de documento: texto impreso Autores: Childs, Brevard, Autor Mención de edición: 1° Editorial: Fortress Press Fecha de publicación: 1987 Número de páginas: 688 páginas Nota general: <27061> Idioma : Español Clasificación: 221/C553/(ING) Resumen: Preface 15
Abbreviations 19
PART ONE
THE OLD TESTAMENT:
INTRODUCTION
I. THE DISCIPLINE OF OLD TESTAMENT INTRODUCTION 27
1 The History of the Discipline 30
2 A Critique of the Historical Critical Introduction 39
3 Old Testament Introduction and the Canon 41
II. THE PROBLEM OF THE CANON 46
1 Terminology 49
2 The Traditional View of the Canon and its Demise 51
3 The Nineteenth-century Historical Consensus and its Erosion 52
4 The Search for a New Consensus 54
5 A New Attempt at Understanding the Canon 57
6 The Relation between the Literary and Canonical Histories 60
7 A Sketch of the Development of the Hebrew Canon 62
8 Summary and Implications 67
III. CANON AND CRITICISM 69
1 Exegesis in a Canonical Contex 72
2 The Canonical Approach Contrasted with Others 74
3 The Final Form of the Text and its Prehistory 75
4 The Canonical Process and the Shaping of Scripture 77
5 Scripture and Tradition 80
6 Canon and Interpretation 82
IV. TEXT AND CANON 84
1 The Nature of the Problem 88
2 History of the Discipline 89
3 The Goals of Old Testament Textual Criticism 92
4 Canon and Text 94
5 Goal and Method of a Canonical Approach to Text Criticism 96
6 Masoretic Text and Canonical 100
7 The Pre-stabilization Period in Old Testament Textual History 101
8 The Text-critical Task 103
PART TWO
THE PENTATEUCH
V. INTRODUCTION TO THE PENTATEUCH 109
1 The History of Modern Critical Research 112
2 The Present State of Critical Debate on the Pentateuch 119
3 The Canonical Shape of the Pentateuch 127
VI. GENESIS 136
1 Historical Critical Problems 140
2 The Canonical Shape of Genesis 145
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 157
V. EXODUS 161
1 Historical Critical Problems 164
2 The Canonical Shape of Exodus 170
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 176
VIII. LEVITICUS 180
1 Historical Critical Problems 182
2 The Canonical Shape of Leviticus 184
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 187
IX. NUMBERS 190
1 Historical Critical Problems 192
2 The Canonical Shape of Numbers 194
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 199
X DEUTERONOMY 202
1 Historical Critical Problems 204
2 The Canonical Shape of Deuteronomy 211
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 224
PART THREE
THE FORMER PROPHETS
XI. INTRODUCTION TO THE FORMER PROPHETS 229
1 Introduction to the Historical Critical Problems 230
2 The Canonical Shape of the Former Prophets 232
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 236
XII. JOSHUA 239
1 Historical Critical Problems 241
2 The Canonical Shape of Joshua 244
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 252
XIII. JUDGES 254
1 Historical Critical Problems 256
2 The Canonical Shape of Judges 258
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 261
XIV. SAMUEL 263
1 Historical Critical Problems 266
2 The Canonical Shape of Samuel 271
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 278
XV. KINGS 281
1 Historical Critical Problems 285
2 The Canonical Shape of Kings 287
3 The Problem of Chronology in the Books of Kings 294
4 Hermeneutical Implications of Canonical Shaping 300
PART FOUR
THE LATTER PROPHETS
XVI INTRODUCTION TO THE LATTER PROPHETS 305
XVII. ISAIAH 311
1 The Historical Approach to the Book of Isaiah 316
2 The Canonical Shape of the Book of Isaiah 325
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 336
XVIII. JEREMIAH 339
1 Historical Critical Problems 342
2 The Canonical Shape of Jeremiah 347
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 353
XIX. EZEKIEL 355
1 Historical Critical Problems 357
2 The Canonical Shape of Ezekiel 360
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 371
THE BOOK OF THE TWELVE
XX. HOSEA 373
1 Historical Critical Problems 374
2 The Canonical Shape of Hosea 377
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 383
XXI. JOEL 385
1 Historical Critical Problems 386
2 The Canonical Shape of Joel 389
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 392
XXII. AMOS 395
1 Historical Critical Problems 397
2 The Canonical Shape of Amos 399
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 409
XXIII. OBADIAH 411
1 Historical Critical Problems 412
2 The Canonical Shape of Obadiah 414
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 415
XXIV. JONAH 417
1 Historical Critical Problems 419
2 The Canonical Shape of Jonah 421
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 426
XXV. MICAH 428
1 Historical Critical Problems 429
2 The Canonical Shape of Micah 431
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 445
XXVI. NAHUM 440
1 Historical Critical Problems 441
2 The Canonical Shape of Nahum 443
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 445
XXVII. HABAKKUK 447
1 Historical Critical Problems 448
2 The Canonical Shape of Habakkuk 451
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 454
XXVIII. ZEPHANIAH 457
1 Historical Critical Problems 458
2 The Canonical Shape of Zephaniah 459
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 461
XXIX. HAGGAI 463
1 Historical Critical Problems 464
2 The Canonical Shape of Haggai 467
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 470
XXX. ZECHARIAH 472
1 Historical Critical Problems 474
2 The Canonical Shape of Zechariah 476
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 485
XXXI. MALACHI 488
1 Historical Critical Problems 489
2 The Canonical Shape of Malachi 491
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 497
PART FIVE
THE WRITINGS
XXXII. INTRODUCTION TO THE WRITINGS 501
XXXIII. THE PSALMS 504
1 The Impact of the Critical Approach on the Psalter 508
2 The Canonical Shape of the Psalter 511
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 522
XXXIV. JOB 526
1 The Present Impasse in the Study of Job 528
2 The Canonical Shape of the Book of Job 533
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 543
XXXV. PROVERBS 545
1 Historical Critical Problems 547
2 The Canonical Shape of Proverbs 551
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 567
XXXVI. RUTH 560
1 Historical Critical Problems 561
2 The Canonical Shape of the Book of Ruth 564
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 567
XXXVII SONG OF SONGS 569
1 Historical Critical Problems 571
2 The Canonical Shape of the Song of Songs 573
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 578
XXXVIII. ECCLESIASTES 580
I Historical Critical Problems 581
2 The Canonical Shape of Ecclesiastes 583
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 588
XXXIX. LAMENTATIONS 590
1 Historical Critical Problems 591
2 The Canonical Shape of Lamentations 593
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 596
XL. ESTHER 598
1 Historical Critical Problems 599
2 The Canonical Shape of the Book of Esther 603
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 606
XLI. DANIEL 608
1 Historical Critical Problems 611
2 The Canonical Shape of the Book of Daniel 613
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 621
XLII. EZRA AND NEHEMIAH 624
1 Historical Critical Problems 626
2 The Canonical Shape of Ezra-Nehemiah 630
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 637
XLIII. CHRONICLES 639
1 Historical Critical Problems 641
2 The Canonical Shape of Chronicles Implications 643
3 Theological and Hermeneutical 654
PART SIX
CONCLUSION
XLIV .THE HEBREW SCRIPTURES AND THE CHRISTIAN BIBLE 659
Index of Authors 672
Introduction to the old testament as scripture [texto impreso] / Childs, Brevard, Autor . - 1° . - [S.l.] : Fortress Press, 1987 . - 688 páginas.
<27061>
Idioma : Español
Clasificación: 221/C553/(ING) Resumen: Preface 15
Abbreviations 19
PART ONE
THE OLD TESTAMENT:
INTRODUCTION
I. THE DISCIPLINE OF OLD TESTAMENT INTRODUCTION 27
1 The History of the Discipline 30
2 A Critique of the Historical Critical Introduction 39
3 Old Testament Introduction and the Canon 41
II. THE PROBLEM OF THE CANON 46
1 Terminology 49
2 The Traditional View of the Canon and its Demise 51
3 The Nineteenth-century Historical Consensus and its Erosion 52
4 The Search for a New Consensus 54
5 A New Attempt at Understanding the Canon 57
6 The Relation between the Literary and Canonical Histories 60
7 A Sketch of the Development of the Hebrew Canon 62
8 Summary and Implications 67
III. CANON AND CRITICISM 69
1 Exegesis in a Canonical Contex 72
2 The Canonical Approach Contrasted with Others 74
3 The Final Form of the Text and its Prehistory 75
4 The Canonical Process and the Shaping of Scripture 77
5 Scripture and Tradition 80
6 Canon and Interpretation 82
IV. TEXT AND CANON 84
1 The Nature of the Problem 88
2 History of the Discipline 89
3 The Goals of Old Testament Textual Criticism 92
4 Canon and Text 94
5 Goal and Method of a Canonical Approach to Text Criticism 96
6 Masoretic Text and Canonical 100
7 The Pre-stabilization Period in Old Testament Textual History 101
8 The Text-critical Task 103
PART TWO
THE PENTATEUCH
V. INTRODUCTION TO THE PENTATEUCH 109
1 The History of Modern Critical Research 112
2 The Present State of Critical Debate on the Pentateuch 119
3 The Canonical Shape of the Pentateuch 127
VI. GENESIS 136
1 Historical Critical Problems 140
2 The Canonical Shape of Genesis 145
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 157
V. EXODUS 161
1 Historical Critical Problems 164
2 The Canonical Shape of Exodus 170
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 176
VIII. LEVITICUS 180
1 Historical Critical Problems 182
2 The Canonical Shape of Leviticus 184
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 187
IX. NUMBERS 190
1 Historical Critical Problems 192
2 The Canonical Shape of Numbers 194
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 199
X DEUTERONOMY 202
1 Historical Critical Problems 204
2 The Canonical Shape of Deuteronomy 211
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 224
PART THREE
THE FORMER PROPHETS
XI. INTRODUCTION TO THE FORMER PROPHETS 229
1 Introduction to the Historical Critical Problems 230
2 The Canonical Shape of the Former Prophets 232
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 236
XII. JOSHUA 239
1 Historical Critical Problems 241
2 The Canonical Shape of Joshua 244
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 252
XIII. JUDGES 254
1 Historical Critical Problems 256
2 The Canonical Shape of Judges 258
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 261
XIV. SAMUEL 263
1 Historical Critical Problems 266
2 The Canonical Shape of Samuel 271
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 278
XV. KINGS 281
1 Historical Critical Problems 285
2 The Canonical Shape of Kings 287
3 The Problem of Chronology in the Books of Kings 294
4 Hermeneutical Implications of Canonical Shaping 300
PART FOUR
THE LATTER PROPHETS
XVI INTRODUCTION TO THE LATTER PROPHETS 305
XVII. ISAIAH 311
1 The Historical Approach to the Book of Isaiah 316
2 The Canonical Shape of the Book of Isaiah 325
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 336
XVIII. JEREMIAH 339
1 Historical Critical Problems 342
2 The Canonical Shape of Jeremiah 347
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 353
XIX. EZEKIEL 355
1 Historical Critical Problems 357
2 The Canonical Shape of Ezekiel 360
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 371
THE BOOK OF THE TWELVE
XX. HOSEA 373
1 Historical Critical Problems 374
2 The Canonical Shape of Hosea 377
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 383
XXI. JOEL 385
1 Historical Critical Problems 386
2 The Canonical Shape of Joel 389
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 392
XXII. AMOS 395
1 Historical Critical Problems 397
2 The Canonical Shape of Amos 399
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 409
XXIII. OBADIAH 411
1 Historical Critical Problems 412
2 The Canonical Shape of Obadiah 414
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 415
XXIV. JONAH 417
1 Historical Critical Problems 419
2 The Canonical Shape of Jonah 421
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 426
XXV. MICAH 428
1 Historical Critical Problems 429
2 The Canonical Shape of Micah 431
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 445
XXVI. NAHUM 440
1 Historical Critical Problems 441
2 The Canonical Shape of Nahum 443
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 445
XXVII. HABAKKUK 447
1 Historical Critical Problems 448
2 The Canonical Shape of Habakkuk 451
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 454
XXVIII. ZEPHANIAH 457
1 Historical Critical Problems 458
2 The Canonical Shape of Zephaniah 459
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 461
XXIX. HAGGAI 463
1 Historical Critical Problems 464
2 The Canonical Shape of Haggai 467
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 470
XXX. ZECHARIAH 472
1 Historical Critical Problems 474
2 The Canonical Shape of Zechariah 476
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 485
XXXI. MALACHI 488
1 Historical Critical Problems 489
2 The Canonical Shape of Malachi 491
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 497
PART FIVE
THE WRITINGS
XXXII. INTRODUCTION TO THE WRITINGS 501
XXXIII. THE PSALMS 504
1 The Impact of the Critical Approach on the Psalter 508
2 The Canonical Shape of the Psalter 511
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 522
XXXIV. JOB 526
1 The Present Impasse in the Study of Job 528
2 The Canonical Shape of the Book of Job 533
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 543
XXXV. PROVERBS 545
1 Historical Critical Problems 547
2 The Canonical Shape of Proverbs 551
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 567
XXXVI. RUTH 560
1 Historical Critical Problems 561
2 The Canonical Shape of the Book of Ruth 564
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 567
XXXVII SONG OF SONGS 569
1 Historical Critical Problems 571
2 The Canonical Shape of the Song of Songs 573
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 578
XXXVIII. ECCLESIASTES 580
I Historical Critical Problems 581
2 The Canonical Shape of Ecclesiastes 583
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 588
XXXIX. LAMENTATIONS 590
1 Historical Critical Problems 591
2 The Canonical Shape of Lamentations 593
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 596
XL. ESTHER 598
1 Historical Critical Problems 599
2 The Canonical Shape of the Book of Esther 603
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 606
XLI. DANIEL 608
1 Historical Critical Problems 611
2 The Canonical Shape of the Book of Daniel 613
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 621
XLII. EZRA AND NEHEMIAH 624
1 Historical Critical Problems 626
2 The Canonical Shape of Ezra-Nehemiah 630
3 Theological and Hermeneutical Implications 637
XLIII. CHRONICLES 639
1 Historical Critical Problems 641
2 The Canonical Shape of Chronicles Implications 643
3 Theological and Hermeneutical 654
PART SIX
CONCLUSION
XLIV .THE HEBREW SCRIPTURES AND THE CHRISTIAN BIBLE 659
Index of Authors 672
Reserva
Reservar este documento
Ejemplares
Código de barras Signatura Tipo de medio Ubicación Sección Estado 27061 221/C553/(ING) CHI Libro Biblioteca Central FTPCL Ejemplares codificados Disponible The hebrew bible / Norman K. Gottwald
Título : The hebrew bible Tipo de documento: texto impreso Autores: Norman K. Gottwald, Autor Mención de edición: 1° Editorial: Fortress Press Fecha de publicación: 1987 Número de páginas: 700 páginas Nota general: <27050> Idioma : Español Clasificación: 220.442/G74/(ING) Resumen: ILLUSTRATIONS xvii
ABBREVIATIONS xxi
PREFACE xxvii
PART I
THE TEXT IN ITS CONTEXTS
CHAPTER 1: ANGLES OF VISION ON THE HEBREW BIBLE
1. A Wealth of Methods in Biblical Studies 6
2 The Confessional Religious Approach to the Hebrew Bible 8
3 The Historical-Critical Approach to the Hebrew Bible 10
3.1 The Bible as a Human Creation 10
3.2 Source Criticism and Form Criticism 11
3.3 Authorship of Biblical Books 14
3.4 Biblical History and Archaeology 15
4. Interaction Between Religious and Historical-Critical
Approaches to Biblical Studies 16
4.1 Collision and Accommodation of Conflicting Methods 16
4.2 Attempts at a Synthesis: Existentialism and Biblical Theology 18
4.3 Breakdown of Consensus in Biblical Studies 19
5. Emergence of New Literary and Social Science Approaches
to the Hebrew Bible 20
5.1 Perceived Limits of Historical and Religious Approaches 20
5.2 Newer Literary Methods 22
5.3. Social Reconstruction of Early Israel 26
5.4 Common Ground in New Literary Criticism and Social Scientific Criticism 29
6. Creative Ferment in Contemporary Biblical Studies 31
6.1 A Common-sense Assessment of Options 31
6.2 A Preview of Biblical Studies to Come 33
CHAPTER 2: THE WORLD OF THE HEBREW BIBLE 35
7. Physical and Economic Geography 36
7.1 The Ancient Near East 36
7.2 Palestine 40
7.3 Subregions Important to Biblical Israel 44
8. Archaeology: Material and Written Remains 49
9. Political, Cultural, and Social History of the Ancient 64
CHAPTER 3: THE LITERARY HISTORY OF THE HEBREW BIBLE
10. Relation of the Hebrew Bible to Other Bodies of Literature 80
10.1 Independent National Literatures: The Ancient
Near Eastern Texts 80
10.2 Jewish and Christian Literatures Dependent on the Hebrew Bible 81
11. How the Hebrew Bible Came to Be 11
11.1 Formation of the Separate Literary 93
11.2 Final Formation of the Hebrew Bible 102
11.3 Preservation and Transmission of the Hebrew Bible 102
12. Translations of the Hebrew Bible 121
12.1 Ancient Versions 121
12.2 English Versions and Translations 124
PART II
INTERTRIBAL CONFEDERACY: ISRAEL'S REVOLUTIONARY BEGINNINGS
PROLOGUE: ON THE SOURCES FOR ISRAEL's PRE MONARCHIC 135
13 The Great Traditionists of Ancient Israel 137
13.1 The Yahwist (J) 137
13.2 The Elohist (E) 137
13.3 The Deuteronomistic History (DH) 137
13.4 The Priestly Writer (P) 139
13.5 The Redaction of JEP 140
13.6 The Common Source of Yahwist and Elohist (G) 141
14. The Bearing of the Literary Traditions on the Early History of Israel 141
14.1 Nongovernmental and Oral Origins of the Traditions 142
14.2 United Tribal Israel as the Subject of the Traditions 143
14.3 Expansion and Elaboration of the History-like Themes of the Traditions 144
14.4 Summary and Methodological Implications 146
CHAPTER 4: TRADITIONS ABOUT THE FATHERS AND MOTHERS OF ISRAEL
15. The Shape of the Traditions in Genesis 12-50 150
15.1 Distribution of the Tradition Units in J, E, and P 150
15.2 Analysis of the Tradition Units by Literary Genres 150
15.3 Composite Unity of the Traditions 154
15.4 Individual Family Traditions or Tribal Group Traditions? 161
16. Sociohistoric Horizons of the Ancestor Tradition 163
16.1 Chronology and Archaeology 164
16.2 Political and Geographical Data 167
16.3 Customs and Laws 170
16.4 Social Struggles in the Ancestor Traditions 172
CHAPTER 5: TRADITIONS ABOUT MOSES: EXODUS, COVENANT, AND LAWGIVING 179
17. The Shape of the Traditions in Exodus, Leviticus, and Numbers 180
17.1 Distribution of the Tradition Units by Sources and Literary Genres 180
17.2 Complex Editing of the Moses Traditions 181
18. Historical-Critical Approaches to the Moses Traditions 190
18.1 The Egyptian Context 190
18.2 Moses: Formative Influences and Leadership Roles 193
18.3 Unity of Action in Exodus and Wandering 197
19. Religion of Moses and the Exodus-Wilderness Israelites 201
19.1 Covenant 202
19.2 Covenant Stipulations: "Laws" 207
19.3 The Divine Name 211
19.4 Cultic Rites and Objects 213
20. Newer Literary Approaches to the Moses Traditions 217
20.1 Folk Tale Plot-motifs and Traditional Episodes 217
20.2 Biblical "Comedy 220
20.3 Structural Narrative Programs and Isotopies 221
20.4 Concluding Assessment 222
21. Sociohistoric Horizons of the Moses Traditions 223
21.1 The Moses Group as a Pre-Israelite Entity 223
21.2 Socioreligious Strategies Connecting the Moses Group and Later Israel 224
CHAPTER 6: TRADITIONS ABOUT INTERTRIBAL ISRAEL'S RISE
TO POWER IN CANAAN 229
22. The Shape of the Traditions in Joshua and Judges 230
22.1 Contents and Literary Genres 230
22.2 Joshua Judges and the Deuteronomistic 240
22.3 Pre-Deuteronomistic Sources in Joshua Judges 247
23. Newer Literary Approaches to Joshua and Judges 252
23.1 New Literary Studies of Deborah and Samson Traditions 252
23.2 Structuralist Studies 255
24. Sociohistorical Horizons of Joshua and Judges 261
24.1 Hypotheses About Israel's Rise to Power 261
24.2 Hypotheses About Israel's Tribal Social 276
PART III
MONARCHY: ISRAEL'S COUNTERREVOLUTIONARY ESTABLISHMENT
PROLOGUE: ON THE SOURCES FOR ISRAEL's MONARCHY HISTORY 293
25. Chronology of the Divided Kingdoms 294
26. DH as a Source for Monarchic History 296
27. Archaeology as a Source for Monarchic History 302
28. Forms and Settings of Prophetic Speech 304
CHAPTER 7: TRADITIONS ABOUT THE UNITED KINGDOM 309
29. The Shape of the Traditions in 1 and 2 Samuel and 1 Kings 1-11 310
29.1 Source Statistics 310
29.2 Older Literary Critical Studies 312
29.3 Newer Literary Critical Studies 314
29.4 Implications of Literary Analysis for Historical Use of the Sources 318
30. The Rise and Triumph of Monarchy in Israel 319
30.1 External and Internal Factors 319
30.2 Saul 329
30.3 David 320
30.4 Solomon 321
30.5 Major Enduring Structural Effects of the Monarchy 323
31. Literary Culture, Religious Cult, and Ideology 325
31.1 The Yahwist (J) 325
31.2 Psalms and Wisdom 334
31.3 David and Zion Traditions 335
CHAPTER 8: TRADITIONS ABOUT THE NORTHERN KINGDOM 337
32. The Shape of the Traditions in 1 Kings 12-2 Kings 17 338
32.1 Source Statistics 338
32.2 Prophetic Narratives 338
32.3 Other Sources Prophetic Books and the Elohist 342
33. History of the Northern Kingdom and Its Relations with
Judah (931-722 в с. в.) 342
33.1 The Schism (931 B.C.E.) 342
33.2 Jeroboam and Baasha Dynasties (931-884 B.C.E.) 343
33.3 Omri Dynasty (880-841 B.C.E.) 344
33.4 Jehu Dynasty (841-752 B.C.E.) 344
33. Collapse of the Northern Kingdom (752-722 B.C.E.) 346
33.6 Patterns of Development in the Two Kingdoms 346
34 Literary Culture, Religion, and Prophetic Critique 348
34.1 The Elohist (E) 348
34.2 Elijah and Elisha 351
34.3 Amos 353
34.4 Hosea 358
CHAPTER 9: TRADITIONS ABOUT THE SOUTHERN KINGDOM 365
35. The Shape of the Traditions in 2 Kings 18-25 366
35.1 Source Statistics 366
35.2 The Spectrum of Sources 366
36. History of the Southern Kingdom (722-586) 368
36.1 Ahaz and Hezekiah (722-686 B.C.E.) 368
36.2 Manasseh (687/686-643/642 B.C.E.) 370
36.3 Josiah (641/640-609 B.C.E.) 370
36.4 Jehoiakim, Jehoiachin, and Zedekiah (609–586 B.C.E.) 372
36.5 The End of Israelite Efforts at Political Independence 372
37. Literary Culture, Religion, and Prophetic Critique 374
37.1 Micah 374
37.2 Isaiah of Jerusalem 377
37.3 Deuteronomy 387
37.4 Prophets of the International Power Shift 390
37.5 Jeremiah 395
PART IV
HOME RULE UNDER GREAT EMPIRES: ISRAEL'S COLONIAL RECOVERY
PROLOGUE: ON THE SOURCES FOR ISRAEL'S COLONIAL HISTORY IN
DISPERSION AND RESTORATION 409
38. Demarcation of the Historical Period 410
39. Biblical and Extra Biblical Sources 410
40. Decline of Late Biblical Historiography 413
41. Organizing the Presentation of Late Biblical Literature 415
CHAPTER 10: SOCIOHISTORICAL HORIZONS OF COLONIAL ISRAEL 419
42. From Independent Israelites to Colonized Jews 420
43. Jewish Response to Neo-Babylonian Dominion (586-539 B.C.E.) 423
43.1 The Continuing Community in Palestine 423
43.2 The Communities in Dispersion 425
44. Jewish Response to Persian Dominion (539-332 B.C.E.) 428
44.1 Mission of Sheshbazzar in 538 B.C.E. 430
44.2 Mission of Zerubbabel and Joshua in 520 B.C.E. 430
44.3 Mission of Nehemiah in 445-430 432
44.4 Mission of Ezra in 458 B.C.E or Later 434
44.5 Developments Among Dispersion Jews 438
45. Jewish Response to Macedonian and Ptolemaic Dominions (332-198 в.с.Е.) 439
45.1 Impact of Alexander: The Meeting of Hellenism and Judaism 439
45.2 Egyptian Hellenism Controls Palestine 441
46. Jewish Response to Seleucid Dominion: The Maccabees (198-140 B.C.E.) 443
46.1 Syrian Hellenism Controls Palestine 443
46.2 Enforced Hellenism and Civil War 444
46.3 The Move from Religious Independence to Political Independence 445
47. A Jewish State Rises and Falls: The Hasmoneans (140-63 B.C.E.) 447
47.1 Triumph and Hellenization of the Jewish State 447
47.2 Factions and Parties in Hasmonean State and Society 449
CHAPTER 11: TRADITIONS OF COLONIAL ISRAEL: COMPLETING
THE LAW AND THE PROPHETS 457
48. Hermeneutical Politics: The Interplay of Law and Prophets 458
48.1 Traditions of Law and Prophecy Develop in Dialogue 458
48.2 A Consensus Canon Elevates Law Tempered by Prophecy 460
48.3 An Expanded Canon Incorporates Prophecy Accommodated to Law 464
49. Rounding Out the Law: The Priestly Writer (P) 469
49.1 Vocabulary, Style, and Structure 469
49.2 Everything in Its Place: A Stable Cult in a Stable Cosmos 473
49.3 Antecedents of P as the Charter of Postexilic Judaism 478
49.4 P as the Framework for the Law 480
50. Rounding Out the Prophets 482
50.1 Ezekiel 482
50.2 Isaiah of the Exile (Deutero-Isaiah) 492
50.3 Prophets of the Rebuilt Temple 502
50.4 Prophets of Conflicted 506
CHAPTER 12: TRADITIONS OF COLONIAL ISRAEL: THE WRITINGS 513
51. Late Historical Works: 1 and 2 Chronicles and Ezra-Nehemiah 514
51.1 Relation Between 1 and 2 Chronicles and Ezra Nehemiah 514
51.2 Restored Jerusalem as True Successor to David's Kingdom 517
51.3 Redactional Disorder in the Books of Ezra and Nehemiah 520
52. Songs 522
52.1 What Is Biblical Poetry? 522
52.2 Psalms 525
52.3 Lamentations 541
52.4 Song of Songs 546
53. Short Stories 551
53.1 The Biblical Short Story: A New Literary Genre? 551
53.2 Ruth 554
53.3 Jonah 558
53.4 Esther 561
54. Wisdom Writings 563
54.1 What Is Wisdom? 563
54.2 Proverbs 571
54.3 Job 575
54.4 Ecclesiastes 579
55. Apocalyptic Writings 582
55.1 What Is Apocalyptic? 582
55.1.a Literary Genre and Mind-set 583
55.1.b Sociohistorical Horizons of Apocalyptic 585
55.2 Daniel 590
CONCLUSION:
THE INTERPLAY OF TEXT, CONCEPT, AND SETTING IN THE HEBREW BIBLE 595
BIBLIOGRAPHY 611
A. Books and Articles Arranged by Divisions of the Text 611
B. Commentaries on Biblical Books 667
INDEX 677
The hebrew bible [texto impreso] / Norman K. Gottwald, Autor . - 1° . - [S.l.] : Fortress Press, 1987 . - 700 páginas.
<27050>
Idioma : Español
Clasificación: 220.442/G74/(ING) Resumen: ILLUSTRATIONS xvii
ABBREVIATIONS xxi
PREFACE xxvii
PART I
THE TEXT IN ITS CONTEXTS
CHAPTER 1: ANGLES OF VISION ON THE HEBREW BIBLE
1. A Wealth of Methods in Biblical Studies 6
2 The Confessional Religious Approach to the Hebrew Bible 8
3 The Historical-Critical Approach to the Hebrew Bible 10
3.1 The Bible as a Human Creation 10
3.2 Source Criticism and Form Criticism 11
3.3 Authorship of Biblical Books 14
3.4 Biblical History and Archaeology 15
4. Interaction Between Religious and Historical-Critical
Approaches to Biblical Studies 16
4.1 Collision and Accommodation of Conflicting Methods 16
4.2 Attempts at a Synthesis: Existentialism and Biblical Theology 18
4.3 Breakdown of Consensus in Biblical Studies 19
5. Emergence of New Literary and Social Science Approaches
to the Hebrew Bible 20
5.1 Perceived Limits of Historical and Religious Approaches 20
5.2 Newer Literary Methods 22
5.3. Social Reconstruction of Early Israel 26
5.4 Common Ground in New Literary Criticism and Social Scientific Criticism 29
6. Creative Ferment in Contemporary Biblical Studies 31
6.1 A Common-sense Assessment of Options 31
6.2 A Preview of Biblical Studies to Come 33
CHAPTER 2: THE WORLD OF THE HEBREW BIBLE 35
7. Physical and Economic Geography 36
7.1 The Ancient Near East 36
7.2 Palestine 40
7.3 Subregions Important to Biblical Israel 44
8. Archaeology: Material and Written Remains 49
9. Political, Cultural, and Social History of the Ancient 64
CHAPTER 3: THE LITERARY HISTORY OF THE HEBREW BIBLE
10. Relation of the Hebrew Bible to Other Bodies of Literature 80
10.1 Independent National Literatures: The Ancient
Near Eastern Texts 80
10.2 Jewish and Christian Literatures Dependent on the Hebrew Bible 81
11. How the Hebrew Bible Came to Be 11
11.1 Formation of the Separate Literary 93
11.2 Final Formation of the Hebrew Bible 102
11.3 Preservation and Transmission of the Hebrew Bible 102
12. Translations of the Hebrew Bible 121
12.1 Ancient Versions 121
12.2 English Versions and Translations 124
PART II
INTERTRIBAL CONFEDERACY: ISRAEL'S REVOLUTIONARY BEGINNINGS
PROLOGUE: ON THE SOURCES FOR ISRAEL's PRE MONARCHIC 135
13 The Great Traditionists of Ancient Israel 137
13.1 The Yahwist (J) 137
13.2 The Elohist (E) 137
13.3 The Deuteronomistic History (DH) 137
13.4 The Priestly Writer (P) 139
13.5 The Redaction of JEP 140
13.6 The Common Source of Yahwist and Elohist (G) 141
14. The Bearing of the Literary Traditions on the Early History of Israel 141
14.1 Nongovernmental and Oral Origins of the Traditions 142
14.2 United Tribal Israel as the Subject of the Traditions 143
14.3 Expansion and Elaboration of the History-like Themes of the Traditions 144
14.4 Summary and Methodological Implications 146
CHAPTER 4: TRADITIONS ABOUT THE FATHERS AND MOTHERS OF ISRAEL
15. The Shape of the Traditions in Genesis 12-50 150
15.1 Distribution of the Tradition Units in J, E, and P 150
15.2 Analysis of the Tradition Units by Literary Genres 150
15.3 Composite Unity of the Traditions 154
15.4 Individual Family Traditions or Tribal Group Traditions? 161
16. Sociohistoric Horizons of the Ancestor Tradition 163
16.1 Chronology and Archaeology 164
16.2 Political and Geographical Data 167
16.3 Customs and Laws 170
16.4 Social Struggles in the Ancestor Traditions 172
CHAPTER 5: TRADITIONS ABOUT MOSES: EXODUS, COVENANT, AND LAWGIVING 179
17. The Shape of the Traditions in Exodus, Leviticus, and Numbers 180
17.1 Distribution of the Tradition Units by Sources and Literary Genres 180
17.2 Complex Editing of the Moses Traditions 181
18. Historical-Critical Approaches to the Moses Traditions 190
18.1 The Egyptian Context 190
18.2 Moses: Formative Influences and Leadership Roles 193
18.3 Unity of Action in Exodus and Wandering 197
19. Religion of Moses and the Exodus-Wilderness Israelites 201
19.1 Covenant 202
19.2 Covenant Stipulations: "Laws" 207
19.3 The Divine Name 211
19.4 Cultic Rites and Objects 213
20. Newer Literary Approaches to the Moses Traditions 217
20.1 Folk Tale Plot-motifs and Traditional Episodes 217
20.2 Biblical "Comedy 220
20.3 Structural Narrative Programs and Isotopies 221
20.4 Concluding Assessment 222
21. Sociohistoric Horizons of the Moses Traditions 223
21.1 The Moses Group as a Pre-Israelite Entity 223
21.2 Socioreligious Strategies Connecting the Moses Group and Later Israel 224
CHAPTER 6: TRADITIONS ABOUT INTERTRIBAL ISRAEL'S RISE
TO POWER IN CANAAN 229
22. The Shape of the Traditions in Joshua and Judges 230
22.1 Contents and Literary Genres 230
22.2 Joshua Judges and the Deuteronomistic 240
22.3 Pre-Deuteronomistic Sources in Joshua Judges 247
23. Newer Literary Approaches to Joshua and Judges 252
23.1 New Literary Studies of Deborah and Samson Traditions 252
23.2 Structuralist Studies 255
24. Sociohistorical Horizons of Joshua and Judges 261
24.1 Hypotheses About Israel's Rise to Power 261
24.2 Hypotheses About Israel's Tribal Social 276
PART III
MONARCHY: ISRAEL'S COUNTERREVOLUTIONARY ESTABLISHMENT
PROLOGUE: ON THE SOURCES FOR ISRAEL's MONARCHY HISTORY 293
25. Chronology of the Divided Kingdoms 294
26. DH as a Source for Monarchic History 296
27. Archaeology as a Source for Monarchic History 302
28. Forms and Settings of Prophetic Speech 304
CHAPTER 7: TRADITIONS ABOUT THE UNITED KINGDOM 309
29. The Shape of the Traditions in 1 and 2 Samuel and 1 Kings 1-11 310
29.1 Source Statistics 310
29.2 Older Literary Critical Studies 312
29.3 Newer Literary Critical Studies 314
29.4 Implications of Literary Analysis for Historical Use of the Sources 318
30. The Rise and Triumph of Monarchy in Israel 319
30.1 External and Internal Factors 319
30.2 Saul 329
30.3 David 320
30.4 Solomon 321
30.5 Major Enduring Structural Effects of the Monarchy 323
31. Literary Culture, Religious Cult, and Ideology 325
31.1 The Yahwist (J) 325
31.2 Psalms and Wisdom 334
31.3 David and Zion Traditions 335
CHAPTER 8: TRADITIONS ABOUT THE NORTHERN KINGDOM 337
32. The Shape of the Traditions in 1 Kings 12-2 Kings 17 338
32.1 Source Statistics 338
32.2 Prophetic Narratives 338
32.3 Other Sources Prophetic Books and the Elohist 342
33. History of the Northern Kingdom and Its Relations with
Judah (931-722 в с. в.) 342
33.1 The Schism (931 B.C.E.) 342
33.2 Jeroboam and Baasha Dynasties (931-884 B.C.E.) 343
33.3 Omri Dynasty (880-841 B.C.E.) 344
33.4 Jehu Dynasty (841-752 B.C.E.) 344
33. Collapse of the Northern Kingdom (752-722 B.C.E.) 346
33.6 Patterns of Development in the Two Kingdoms 346
34 Literary Culture, Religion, and Prophetic Critique 348
34.1 The Elohist (E) 348
34.2 Elijah and Elisha 351
34.3 Amos 353
34.4 Hosea 358
CHAPTER 9: TRADITIONS ABOUT THE SOUTHERN KINGDOM 365
35. The Shape of the Traditions in 2 Kings 18-25 366
35.1 Source Statistics 366
35.2 The Spectrum of Sources 366
36. History of the Southern Kingdom (722-586) 368
36.1 Ahaz and Hezekiah (722-686 B.C.E.) 368
36.2 Manasseh (687/686-643/642 B.C.E.) 370
36.3 Josiah (641/640-609 B.C.E.) 370
36.4 Jehoiakim, Jehoiachin, and Zedekiah (609–586 B.C.E.) 372
36.5 The End of Israelite Efforts at Political Independence 372
37. Literary Culture, Religion, and Prophetic Critique 374
37.1 Micah 374
37.2 Isaiah of Jerusalem 377
37.3 Deuteronomy 387
37.4 Prophets of the International Power Shift 390
37.5 Jeremiah 395
PART IV
HOME RULE UNDER GREAT EMPIRES: ISRAEL'S COLONIAL RECOVERY
PROLOGUE: ON THE SOURCES FOR ISRAEL'S COLONIAL HISTORY IN
DISPERSION AND RESTORATION 409
38. Demarcation of the Historical Period 410
39. Biblical and Extra Biblical Sources 410
40. Decline of Late Biblical Historiography 413
41. Organizing the Presentation of Late Biblical Literature 415
CHAPTER 10: SOCIOHISTORICAL HORIZONS OF COLONIAL ISRAEL 419
42. From Independent Israelites to Colonized Jews 420
43. Jewish Response to Neo-Babylonian Dominion (586-539 B.C.E.) 423
43.1 The Continuing Community in Palestine 423
43.2 The Communities in Dispersion 425
44. Jewish Response to Persian Dominion (539-332 B.C.E.) 428
44.1 Mission of Sheshbazzar in 538 B.C.E. 430
44.2 Mission of Zerubbabel and Joshua in 520 B.C.E. 430
44.3 Mission of Nehemiah in 445-430 432
44.4 Mission of Ezra in 458 B.C.E or Later 434
44.5 Developments Among Dispersion Jews 438
45. Jewish Response to Macedonian and Ptolemaic Dominions (332-198 в.с.Е.) 439
45.1 Impact of Alexander: The Meeting of Hellenism and Judaism 439
45.2 Egyptian Hellenism Controls Palestine 441
46. Jewish Response to Seleucid Dominion: The Maccabees (198-140 B.C.E.) 443
46.1 Syrian Hellenism Controls Palestine 443
46.2 Enforced Hellenism and Civil War 444
46.3 The Move from Religious Independence to Political Independence 445
47. A Jewish State Rises and Falls: The Hasmoneans (140-63 B.C.E.) 447
47.1 Triumph and Hellenization of the Jewish State 447
47.2 Factions and Parties in Hasmonean State and Society 449
CHAPTER 11: TRADITIONS OF COLONIAL ISRAEL: COMPLETING
THE LAW AND THE PROPHETS 457
48. Hermeneutical Politics: The Interplay of Law and Prophets 458
48.1 Traditions of Law and Prophecy Develop in Dialogue 458
48.2 A Consensus Canon Elevates Law Tempered by Prophecy 460
48.3 An Expanded Canon Incorporates Prophecy Accommodated to Law 464
49. Rounding Out the Law: The Priestly Writer (P) 469
49.1 Vocabulary, Style, and Structure 469
49.2 Everything in Its Place: A Stable Cult in a Stable Cosmos 473
49.3 Antecedents of P as the Charter of Postexilic Judaism 478
49.4 P as the Framework for the Law 480
50. Rounding Out the Prophets 482
50.1 Ezekiel 482
50.2 Isaiah of the Exile (Deutero-Isaiah) 492
50.3 Prophets of the Rebuilt Temple 502
50.4 Prophets of Conflicted 506
CHAPTER 12: TRADITIONS OF COLONIAL ISRAEL: THE WRITINGS 513
51. Late Historical Works: 1 and 2 Chronicles and Ezra-Nehemiah 514
51.1 Relation Between 1 and 2 Chronicles and Ezra Nehemiah 514
51.2 Restored Jerusalem as True Successor to David's Kingdom 517
51.3 Redactional Disorder in the Books of Ezra and Nehemiah 520
52. Songs 522
52.1 What Is Biblical Poetry? 522
52.2 Psalms 525
52.3 Lamentations 541
52.4 Song of Songs 546
53. Short Stories 551
53.1 The Biblical Short Story: A New Literary Genre? 551
53.2 Ruth 554
53.3 Jonah 558
53.4 Esther 561
54. Wisdom Writings 563
54.1 What Is Wisdom? 563
54.2 Proverbs 571
54.3 Job 575
54.4 Ecclesiastes 579
55. Apocalyptic Writings 582
55.1 What Is Apocalyptic? 582
55.1.a Literary Genre and Mind-set 583
55.1.b Sociohistorical Horizons of Apocalyptic 585
55.2 Daniel 590
CONCLUSION:
THE INTERPLAY OF TEXT, CONCEPT, AND SETTING IN THE HEBREW BIBLE 595
BIBLIOGRAPHY 611
A. Books and Articles Arranged by Divisions of the Text 611
B. Commentaries on Biblical Books 667
INDEX 677
Reserva
Reservar este documento
Ejemplares
Código de barras Signatura Tipo de medio Ubicación Sección Estado 27050 220.442/G74/(ING) NOR Libro Biblioteca Central FTPCL Ejemplares codificados Disponible The opponents of paul in second corinthians / Dieter, Georgi
Título : The opponents of paul in second corinthians Tipo de documento: texto impreso Autores: Dieter, Georgi, Autor Mención de edición: 1° Editorial: Fortress Press Fecha de publicación: 1986 Número de páginas: 463 páginas Nota general: <27080> Idioma : Inglés Clasificación: 225.08/G36/(ING) Resumen: Preface vii
Abbreviations xi
Introduction 1
History of Modern Research on Paul's Opponents in Corinth 1
Reasons for Limiting This Study to 2 Cor. 2:14-7:4 and 10-13 9
The Course of Events 14
1. The Missionary Role of the Opponents 27
The Opponents' Self-Designations for the Task 27
The Opponents' Self-Designations of Origin 27
2. Missionary Activity in New Testament Times 83
The Jewish Mission 83
The Pagan Mission 151
The Mission of the Early Church 164
3. The Self-Understanding of the Opponents 229
The Self-Consciousness of the Opponents 229
The Tradition of the Opponents 246
Conclusion 315
The Relationship of Paul and His Opponents 315
The Relationship of Paul and His
Opponents to the Corinthian Church 317
Bibliography 1 321
Epilogue 333
Introduction 333
The Immediate Textual Base 335
Widening of the Textual Base 338
Organizational and Sociological Dimensions 358
Contributions of Jewish Apologetics 422
Paul's Opponents in 2 Corinthians and the Early Church 445
Index of Subjects 451
Index of Scripture References 455
Index of Extra-Seriptural References 459
Index of Greek Vocabulary 463
The opponents of paul in second corinthians [texto impreso] / Dieter, Georgi, Autor . - 1° . - [S.l.] : Fortress Press, 1986 . - 463 páginas.
<27080>
Idioma : Inglés
Clasificación: 225.08/G36/(ING) Resumen: Preface vii
Abbreviations xi
Introduction 1
History of Modern Research on Paul's Opponents in Corinth 1
Reasons for Limiting This Study to 2 Cor. 2:14-7:4 and 10-13 9
The Course of Events 14
1. The Missionary Role of the Opponents 27
The Opponents' Self-Designations for the Task 27
The Opponents' Self-Designations of Origin 27
2. Missionary Activity in New Testament Times 83
The Jewish Mission 83
The Pagan Mission 151
The Mission of the Early Church 164
3. The Self-Understanding of the Opponents 229
The Self-Consciousness of the Opponents 229
The Tradition of the Opponents 246
Conclusion 315
The Relationship of Paul and His Opponents 315
The Relationship of Paul and His
Opponents to the Corinthian Church 317
Bibliography 1 321
Epilogue 333
Introduction 333
The Immediate Textual Base 335
Widening of the Textual Base 338
Organizational and Sociological Dimensions 358
Contributions of Jewish Apologetics 422
Paul's Opponents in 2 Corinthians and the Early Church 445
Index of Subjects 451
Index of Scripture References 455
Index of Extra-Seriptural References 459
Index of Greek Vocabulary 463
Reserva
Reservar este documento
Ejemplares
Código de barras Signatura Tipo de medio Ubicación Sección Estado 27080 225.08/G36/(ING) DIE Libro Biblioteca Central FTPCL Ejemplares codificados Disponible