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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
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Código de barras Signatura Tipo de medio Ubicación Sección Estado 27061 221/C553/(ING) CHI 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 Teologia biblica del antiguo y del nuevo testamento / Childs, Brevard
Título : Teologia biblica del antiguo y del nuevo testamento : Biblioteca de Estudios Bíblicos Tipo de documento: texto impreso Autores: Childs, Brevard Editorial: Salamanca [España] : Sígueme Colección: Biblioteca de estudios biblicos num. 134 Número de páginas: 766 paginas Nota general: <22086> Clasificación: 220.081/B/134 Resumen: I. PRÉAMBULOS – 15
1. El desarrollo de la disciplina de la teología bíblica – 17
2. Modelos actuales de teología bíblica – 25
3. Antiguos enfoques cristianos clásicos de la teología bíblica – 45
II. BÚSQUEDADE UN NUEVO ENFOQUE – 67
1. El problema de la biblia cristiana – 69
2. Un enfoque canónico de la teología bíblica – 83
3. De testimonio a tema – 93
4. Categorías canónicas para estructurar una teología bíblica – 105
III. EL TESTIMONIO ESPECÍFICO DEL ANTIGUO TESTAMENTO – 109
1. Problemas metodológicos – 111
2. La creación – 121
3. De edén a babel – 133
4. Tradiciones patriarcales – 137
5. Tradiciones mosaicas – 145
6. La posesión de la tierra y el asentamiento – 159
7. La tradición de los jueces – 165
8. El establecimiento de la monarquía – 169
9. El reino de lo divino - 175
10. El destierro y la restauración – 179
11. Las tradiciones proféticas – 185
12. La tradición apocalíptica 199
13. La tradición sapiencial – 205
14. La tradición de los salmos – 209
15. Excursus: el problema teológico de la historia del AT – 215
IV. EL TESTIMONIO ESPECÍFICO DEL NUEVO TESTAMENTO – 227
1. El problema hermenéutico del estudio histórico del NT – 229
2. La proclamación primitiva de la Iglesia – 237
3. El evangelio paulino – 251
4. La formación de los evangelios – 269
5. Los cuatro evangelios – 279
6. El testimonio del libro de los hechos sobre la misión de la Iglesia – 305
7. La era pospaulina – 311
V. LA EXÉGESIS EN EL CONTEXTO DE LA TEOLOGÍA BÍBLICA – 339
1. La Akedah - 341
2. Parábola de los arrendatarios malvados - 353
VI. REFLEXIÓN TEOLÓGICA SOBRE LA BIBLIA CRISTIANA – 363
1. La identidad de Dios – 365
2. Dios, el creador – 397
3. La alianza, la elección, el pueblo de Dios – 425
4. Cristo, el señor – 463
5. La reconciliación con Dios – 495
6. La ley y el evangelio – 541
7. Humanidad: antigua y nueva – 575
8. La fe bíblica – 605
9. El reino y el gobierno de dios – 633
10. La configuración de la vida obediente: la ética – 665
VII. UNA LECTURA HOLÍSTCIA DE LA ESCRITURA CRISTIANA – 723
Índice de autores – 735
Selección de citas bíblicas – 749
Índice general - 757
Teologia biblica del antiguo y del nuevo testamento : Biblioteca de Estudios Bíblicos [texto impreso] / Childs, Brevard . - Salamanca (37080, España) : Sígueme, [s.d.] . - 766 paginas. - (Biblioteca de estudios biblicos; 134) .
<22086>
Clasificación: 220.081/B/134 Resumen: I. PRÉAMBULOS – 15
1. El desarrollo de la disciplina de la teología bíblica – 17
2. Modelos actuales de teología bíblica – 25
3. Antiguos enfoques cristianos clásicos de la teología bíblica – 45
II. BÚSQUEDADE UN NUEVO ENFOQUE – 67
1. El problema de la biblia cristiana – 69
2. Un enfoque canónico de la teología bíblica – 83
3. De testimonio a tema – 93
4. Categorías canónicas para estructurar una teología bíblica – 105
III. EL TESTIMONIO ESPECÍFICO DEL ANTIGUO TESTAMENTO – 109
1. Problemas metodológicos – 111
2. La creación – 121
3. De edén a babel – 133
4. Tradiciones patriarcales – 137
5. Tradiciones mosaicas – 145
6. La posesión de la tierra y el asentamiento – 159
7. La tradición de los jueces – 165
8. El establecimiento de la monarquía – 169
9. El reino de lo divino - 175
10. El destierro y la restauración – 179
11. Las tradiciones proféticas – 185
12. La tradición apocalíptica 199
13. La tradición sapiencial – 205
14. La tradición de los salmos – 209
15. Excursus: el problema teológico de la historia del AT – 215
IV. EL TESTIMONIO ESPECÍFICO DEL NUEVO TESTAMENTO – 227
1. El problema hermenéutico del estudio histórico del NT – 229
2. La proclamación primitiva de la Iglesia – 237
3. El evangelio paulino – 251
4. La formación de los evangelios – 269
5. Los cuatro evangelios – 279
6. El testimonio del libro de los hechos sobre la misión de la Iglesia – 305
7. La era pospaulina – 311
V. LA EXÉGESIS EN EL CONTEXTO DE LA TEOLOGÍA BÍBLICA – 339
1. La Akedah - 341
2. Parábola de los arrendatarios malvados - 353
VI. REFLEXIÓN TEOLÓGICA SOBRE LA BIBLIA CRISTIANA – 363
1. La identidad de Dios – 365
2. Dios, el creador – 397
3. La alianza, la elección, el pueblo de Dios – 425
4. Cristo, el señor – 463
5. La reconciliación con Dios – 495
6. La ley y el evangelio – 541
7. Humanidad: antigua y nueva – 575
8. La fe bíblica – 605
9. El reino y el gobierno de dios – 633
10. La configuración de la vida obediente: la ética – 665
VII. UNA LECTURA HOLÍSTCIA DE LA ESCRITURA CRISTIANA – 723
Índice de autores – 735
Selección de citas bíblicas – 749
Índice general - 757
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Código de barras Signatura Tipo de medio Ubicación Sección Estado 22086 220.081/B/134 CHI Libro Biblioteca Central FTPCL Ejemplares codificados Disponible The new testament as canon an introduction / Childs, Brevard
Título : The new testament as canon an introduction Tipo de documento: texto impreso Autores: Childs, Brevard, Autor Mención de edición: 1° Editorial: Fortress Press Fecha de publicación: 1985 Número de páginas: 572 páginas Nota general: <27079> Idioma : Inglés Clasificación: 225/C553/(ING) Resumen: Preface xv
Abbreviations xix
PART ONE
THE NEW TESTAMENT
1. THE ROLE OF THE CANON WITHIN NEW TESTAMENT INTRODUCTION 3
2. THE CANON AS AN HISTORICAL AND THEOLOGICAL 16
3. PROBLEM THE RATIONALE OF A CANONICAL APPROACH 34
4. METHODOLOGY OF CANONICAL EXEGESIS 48
PART TWO
THE GOSPELS
5. MATTHEW 57
I. The structure of Matthew 63
II. The church's access to Christ 64
III. Matthew's use of the Old Testament 69
IV. The problem of the law 71
V. The Sermon on the Mount 73
VI. The way of righteousness 76
VII. Israel and the church 77
6. MARK 79
I. The purpose of Mark 82
II. The hidden and revealed Messiah 84
III. The canonical shape of the Gospel 86
IV. Mark's passion account 91
V. The resurrection according to Mark 92
VI. The canonical significance of the longer ending 94
7. LUKE 96
I. The critical debate 101
II. The Lucan prologue, 1.1-4 103
III. Luke's understanding of time 107
A. The role of the Spirit 108
B. The delay of the parousia 109
C. The approaching end, Luke 21 110
IV. Proof-from-prophecy 113
V. The canonical shape of Luke as a separate book 116
8. JOHN 117
I. Historical-critical questions in canonical perspective 122
A Structure and style 122
B. Purpose of the Gospel 123
C. The addresses of the Gospel 125
D. The authorship of the Fourth Gospel 128
E. Tradents of the tradition 131
F. Levels of tradition 132
G. The historical Jesus and the Christ of faith 134
II. On reading the Fourth Gospel canonically 136
A The prologue, 11-18 136
B. The book of signs. 1.19-12.50 138
C. The farewell addresses, chs. 13-17 138
D. The passion of Christ, chs. 18–19 139
E. The resurrection, ch. 20 140
F. After the resurrection, ch. 21 141
9. THE CANONICAL PROBLEM OF THE FOUR GOSPELS 143
I. The history of the formation of the fourfold collection 144
II. Classic attempts at harmonization 145
III. The collapse of the canonical categories 148
IV. The theological function of the four Gospels within the canon 151
V. Gospel harmony and canon 154
10. A CANONICAL HARMONY OF THE GOSPELS 157
I. The infancy narratives 157
A Attempts at harmonization 158
B. The approach of historical criticism 159
C. A critique of the two approaches 160
D. A canonical approach to the infancy narratives 161
II. John the Baptist 165
A. Attempts at harmonization 166
B. The approach of historical criticism 167
C. A canonical harmony of the John the Baptist accounts 169
III. Peter's confession at Caesarea Philippi 174
A. Introduction to the problems 174
B. The canonical shaping of the tradition 175
(i) Mark 176
(ii) Matthew 177
(iii) Luke 178
C. Hermeneutical implications of the larger canonical context 179
IV. The rich young ruler 180
A. Introduction to the problems 181
B. A canonical approach 182
C. Some larger implications of the canonical harmony 185
V. The cursing of the fig tree 187
A. Introduction to the problems 188
B. The search for a canonical harmony 190
VI. The anointing of Jesus 191
A. Introduction to the problems 192
B. The witness of the individual Gospels 193
C. The search for a canonical harmony 190
VII. The resurrection narratives 191
A Harmonistic attempts 201
B. The application of the historical-critical method 202
C. The interpretation of Karl Barth 203
D. The hermeneutical issues at stake 204
E. The search for a canonical harmony 205
PART THREE
THE ACTS
11. THE ACTS OF THE APOSTLES 213
I. The contemporary debate over Acts 218
II. The actualization of the gospel in Acts 219
III. The church of the future 225
IV. Critical issues in Luke's theology 228
A. Luke's historical portrayal 228
B. Luke's portrayal of Paul 232
C. Literary techniques and canonical shape 234
D. The defence of Paul 234
V. The canonical effect of Acts within the New Testament 237
PART FOUR
THE PAULINE CORPUS
12. ROMANS 243
I. The critical debate 247
II. The hermeneutical problem of Romans 249
III. The shape and reception of Romans 251
IV. The beginning and ending of the letter 252
V. The righteousness of God as theme 255
VI. The role of the Old Testament 258
VII. The problem of the addressee 260
13. I CORINTHIANS 264
I. Critical issues of I Corinthians 268
A. Literary problems 268
B. Paul's opponents 269
C. The time-conditionality of Paul's responses 271
D. Paul's authority 272
II. A canonical approach to the book 273
A. The literary problem 273
B. The voices of Paul's opponents 274
C. The time-conditionality of Paul 276
D. The canonical authority of Paul 277
14. II CORINTHIANS 282
I. New historical reconstructions 285
II. New literary possibilities 286
III. The hermeneutical problem at stake 289
IV. The canonical shape of II Corinthians 291
V. The canonization of the Corinthian correspondence 295
15. GALATIANS 297
I. Form and function of the letter 300
II. The letter's occasion, protagonists and recipients 304
III. The canonical function of the letter 306
IV. Paul's original addressees and subsequent readers 308
16. EPHESIANS 311
I. The letter addressee 314
II. The problem of authorship 316
III. The purpose of the letter 320
IV. The canonical shape of Ephesians 322
17. PHILIPPIANS 329
I. The modern critical debate 331
II. The search for a canonical interpretation 335
18. COLOSSIANS 338
I. The critical debate 341
A. The authorship of Colossians 341
B. The nature of the Colossian heresy 343
C. Literary and redactional features 343
II The canonical shape of the letter 344
19. I THESSALONIANS 351
I. Modern critical issues 353
II. The canonical role of the castle 356
20. II THESSALONIANS 358
I. Critical problems at issue 360
II. Theories of authorship 361
III. Exploring a canonical alternative 366
21. THE PASTORAL EPISTLES 373
I. The debate over genuineness 378
II. Recent theories of pseudepigraphy 380
III. The search for the canonical shape of the Pastorals 387
22. PHILEMON 396
23. HEBREWS 400
I. Historical-critical issues 400
II. Some proposed solutions 404
III. A canonical approach to Hebrews 407
A The function of the title 413
B. The function of the structure 415
C. The function of the conclusión 417
24. THE PAULINE CORPUS 419
PART FIVE
THE CATHOLIC EPISTLES
25 JAMES 431
I. The modern critical debate 434
II. The canonical shape of James 435
III. The teachings of Jesus 436
IV. Faith and Works 438
V. Judaism and Christianity 443
VI. Conclusion 444
26. I PETER 446
I The modern critical debate 450
A. Literary structure 450
B. The question of addressee 451
C. Authorship of the epistle 451
D. The pseudepigraphical hypothesis 454
E. The purpose of the epistle 456
II. The canonical shape and function of the letter 457
A. The form and function of the praescript 457
B. The conclusion of the letter 459
C. The canonical function of the letter 460
27. II PETER 463
I. II Peter and the problem of canon 465
II. The question of authorship 466
III. The debate over the letter's function 468
IV. Canonical function and the formation of scripture 469
V. The eschatological hope 474
VI. II Peter's relation to I Peter and Jude 475
28. THE JOHANNINE EPISTLES 477
I. The modern critical debate 480
II. New directions of interpretation and a critique 482
III. The canonical role of the epistles 485
29. JUDE 488
I. The modern critical debate 489
II. The canonical role of the epistle 492
30 THE CORPUS OF CATHOLIC EPISTLES 494
PART SIX
REVELATION
31 REVELATION 499
I. Historical-critical issues 503
II. The canonical shape of the book 508
A. The form and function of the book in the first century 508
B. The canonical interpretation of Revelation 514
Excursus I The hermeneutical problem of New Testament text criticism 518
Excursus II Interpretation of the parables within a canonical context 531
Excursus III The canonical approach and the 'new Yale theology 541
Excursus IV Selected commentaries for pastor and teacher 547
Index of modern authors 557
The new testament as canon an introduction [texto impreso] / Childs, Brevard, Autor . - 1° . - [S.l.] : Fortress Press, 1985 . - 572 páginas.
<27079>
Idioma : Inglés
Clasificación: 225/C553/(ING) Resumen: Preface xv
Abbreviations xix
PART ONE
THE NEW TESTAMENT
1. THE ROLE OF THE CANON WITHIN NEW TESTAMENT INTRODUCTION 3
2. THE CANON AS AN HISTORICAL AND THEOLOGICAL 16
3. PROBLEM THE RATIONALE OF A CANONICAL APPROACH 34
4. METHODOLOGY OF CANONICAL EXEGESIS 48
PART TWO
THE GOSPELS
5. MATTHEW 57
I. The structure of Matthew 63
II. The church's access to Christ 64
III. Matthew's use of the Old Testament 69
IV. The problem of the law 71
V. The Sermon on the Mount 73
VI. The way of righteousness 76
VII. Israel and the church 77
6. MARK 79
I. The purpose of Mark 82
II. The hidden and revealed Messiah 84
III. The canonical shape of the Gospel 86
IV. Mark's passion account 91
V. The resurrection according to Mark 92
VI. The canonical significance of the longer ending 94
7. LUKE 96
I. The critical debate 101
II. The Lucan prologue, 1.1-4 103
III. Luke's understanding of time 107
A. The role of the Spirit 108
B. The delay of the parousia 109
C. The approaching end, Luke 21 110
IV. Proof-from-prophecy 113
V. The canonical shape of Luke as a separate book 116
8. JOHN 117
I. Historical-critical questions in canonical perspective 122
A Structure and style 122
B. Purpose of the Gospel 123
C. The addresses of the Gospel 125
D. The authorship of the Fourth Gospel 128
E. Tradents of the tradition 131
F. Levels of tradition 132
G. The historical Jesus and the Christ of faith 134
II. On reading the Fourth Gospel canonically 136
A The prologue, 11-18 136
B. The book of signs. 1.19-12.50 138
C. The farewell addresses, chs. 13-17 138
D. The passion of Christ, chs. 18–19 139
E. The resurrection, ch. 20 140
F. After the resurrection, ch. 21 141
9. THE CANONICAL PROBLEM OF THE FOUR GOSPELS 143
I. The history of the formation of the fourfold collection 144
II. Classic attempts at harmonization 145
III. The collapse of the canonical categories 148
IV. The theological function of the four Gospels within the canon 151
V. Gospel harmony and canon 154
10. A CANONICAL HARMONY OF THE GOSPELS 157
I. The infancy narratives 157
A Attempts at harmonization 158
B. The approach of historical criticism 159
C. A critique of the two approaches 160
D. A canonical approach to the infancy narratives 161
II. John the Baptist 165
A. Attempts at harmonization 166
B. The approach of historical criticism 167
C. A canonical harmony of the John the Baptist accounts 169
III. Peter's confession at Caesarea Philippi 174
A. Introduction to the problems 174
B. The canonical shaping of the tradition 175
(i) Mark 176
(ii) Matthew 177
(iii) Luke 178
C. Hermeneutical implications of the larger canonical context 179
IV. The rich young ruler 180
A. Introduction to the problems 181
B. A canonical approach 182
C. Some larger implications of the canonical harmony 185
V. The cursing of the fig tree 187
A. Introduction to the problems 188
B. The search for a canonical harmony 190
VI. The anointing of Jesus 191
A. Introduction to the problems 192
B. The witness of the individual Gospels 193
C. The search for a canonical harmony 190
VII. The resurrection narratives 191
A Harmonistic attempts 201
B. The application of the historical-critical method 202
C. The interpretation of Karl Barth 203
D. The hermeneutical issues at stake 204
E. The search for a canonical harmony 205
PART THREE
THE ACTS
11. THE ACTS OF THE APOSTLES 213
I. The contemporary debate over Acts 218
II. The actualization of the gospel in Acts 219
III. The church of the future 225
IV. Critical issues in Luke's theology 228
A. Luke's historical portrayal 228
B. Luke's portrayal of Paul 232
C. Literary techniques and canonical shape 234
D. The defence of Paul 234
V. The canonical effect of Acts within the New Testament 237
PART FOUR
THE PAULINE CORPUS
12. ROMANS 243
I. The critical debate 247
II. The hermeneutical problem of Romans 249
III. The shape and reception of Romans 251
IV. The beginning and ending of the letter 252
V. The righteousness of God as theme 255
VI. The role of the Old Testament 258
VII. The problem of the addressee 260
13. I CORINTHIANS 264
I. Critical issues of I Corinthians 268
A. Literary problems 268
B. Paul's opponents 269
C. The time-conditionality of Paul's responses 271
D. Paul's authority 272
II. A canonical approach to the book 273
A. The literary problem 273
B. The voices of Paul's opponents 274
C. The time-conditionality of Paul 276
D. The canonical authority of Paul 277
14. II CORINTHIANS 282
I. New historical reconstructions 285
II. New literary possibilities 286
III. The hermeneutical problem at stake 289
IV. The canonical shape of II Corinthians 291
V. The canonization of the Corinthian correspondence 295
15. GALATIANS 297
I. Form and function of the letter 300
II. The letter's occasion, protagonists and recipients 304
III. The canonical function of the letter 306
IV. Paul's original addressees and subsequent readers 308
16. EPHESIANS 311
I. The letter addressee 314
II. The problem of authorship 316
III. The purpose of the letter 320
IV. The canonical shape of Ephesians 322
17. PHILIPPIANS 329
I. The modern critical debate 331
II. The search for a canonical interpretation 335
18. COLOSSIANS 338
I. The critical debate 341
A. The authorship of Colossians 341
B. The nature of the Colossian heresy 343
C. Literary and redactional features 343
II The canonical shape of the letter 344
19. I THESSALONIANS 351
I. Modern critical issues 353
II. The canonical role of the castle 356
20. II THESSALONIANS 358
I. Critical problems at issue 360
II. Theories of authorship 361
III. Exploring a canonical alternative 366
21. THE PASTORAL EPISTLES 373
I. The debate over genuineness 378
II. Recent theories of pseudepigraphy 380
III. The search for the canonical shape of the Pastorals 387
22. PHILEMON 396
23. HEBREWS 400
I. Historical-critical issues 400
II. Some proposed solutions 404
III. A canonical approach to Hebrews 407
A The function of the title 413
B. The function of the structure 415
C. The function of the conclusión 417
24. THE PAULINE CORPUS 419
PART FIVE
THE CATHOLIC EPISTLES
25 JAMES 431
I. The modern critical debate 434
II. The canonical shape of James 435
III. The teachings of Jesus 436
IV. Faith and Works 438
V. Judaism and Christianity 443
VI. Conclusion 444
26. I PETER 446
I The modern critical debate 450
A. Literary structure 450
B. The question of addressee 451
C. Authorship of the epistle 451
D. The pseudepigraphical hypothesis 454
E. The purpose of the epistle 456
II. The canonical shape and function of the letter 457
A. The form and function of the praescript 457
B. The conclusion of the letter 459
C. The canonical function of the letter 460
27. II PETER 463
I. II Peter and the problem of canon 465
II. The question of authorship 466
III. The debate over the letter's function 468
IV. Canonical function and the formation of scripture 469
V. The eschatological hope 474
VI. II Peter's relation to I Peter and Jude 475
28. THE JOHANNINE EPISTLES 477
I. The modern critical debate 480
II. New directions of interpretation and a critique 482
III. The canonical role of the epistles 485
29. JUDE 488
I. The modern critical debate 489
II. The canonical role of the epistle 492
30 THE CORPUS OF CATHOLIC EPISTLES 494
PART SIX
REVELATION
31 REVELATION 499
I. Historical-critical issues 503
II. The canonical shape of the book 508
A. The form and function of the book in the first century 508
B. The canonical interpretation of Revelation 514
Excursus I The hermeneutical problem of New Testament text criticism 518
Excursus II Interpretation of the parables within a canonical context 531
Excursus III The canonical approach and the 'new Yale theology 541
Excursus IV Selected commentaries for pastor and teacher 547
Index of modern authors 557
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Código de barras Signatura Tipo de medio Ubicación Sección Estado 27079 225/C553/(ING) CHI Libro Biblioteca Central FTPCL Ejemplares codificados Excluido de préstamo