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What does archaeology tell us about Jesus and the world in which he
lived? How accurate are the Gospel accounts of first-century
Galilee and Judea? Has the tomb of Jesus really been found?
Informed by the latest archaeological research, and illustrated
throughout with photographs of key findings, this fascinating book
opens up the subject for people of all religious backgrounds. It
will help readers gain a much clearer and more accurate picture of
life in the Roman world during first century, and enable them to
understand and critique the latest theories - both sober and
sensational - about who Jesus was and what he stood for.
The, Uranium Seekers, saga began in 1976 when world-famous
Hollywood, California photographer, Martin, was contracted to come
to Utah and begin documenting, paying photographic tribute to,
uranium miners, native Americans, and the Vanadium King uranium and
vanadium mines on Temple Mountain, Emery County, Utah. The essence
of the project was to pay tribute to the persons who traversed Zane
Grey's and John Ford's great western expanse in search of uranium
ore, one rock at a time, from before Madame Curies trips to the,
then, present, and to remind the world's public that uranium was,
and still is, used to kill, not humanity, rather cancer. I harbored
the hope that by going back to the first uranium rocks the nuclear
industry would re-evaluate the physical structure of nuclear
reactors, one cubic yard at a time. Nuclear reactors, when built,
witness Fukushima Daiichi, are still being created with too much
haste. Like the uranium miners themselves, it's the hands of the
humanity who cast the cement forms in which the reactors rest which
determines safety. I also, rather naively, hoped when uranium's
harmonous utilization was embraced its destructive military
reality, throughout the world, would melt. Even with the support of
the fine Beverly Hills, California literary agent, Clyde M.
Vandeburg of Vandeburg-Linkletter Associates who represented Ronald
and Nancy Reagan, Barry Goldwater, and many others at the time, the
national and international events at Three-Mile Island and
Chernobyl put Uranium Seekers and Martins great photographs to bed
for decades. However, recently I learned the Utah Historical
Quarterly Unpublished Manuscripts from the Department of Community
and Culture at the Utah State Archives had harbored some of the
manuscript material for decades and the recent events at Fukushima
Daiichi made uranium part of the international conversation once
again, I decided to dust off Martin's work and snatches of the
original material for Uranium Seekers.
The historical study of the Jesus stories and the transmission of these stories through time has been of seminal importance to historians of religion. Critical historical examination allows scholars an escape from the confines of dogma, belief, and the theological interpretation. In recent years, historical Jesus studies have also opened up an important discussion concerning antiSemitism and early Christianity and the political and ideological filtering of the Jesus story of early Christianity through the Roman empire and beyond. This comprehensive collection will bring together the vast array of historical research into the reality of the man, the teachings, and the acts and events ascribed to him that have served as the foundational story of one of the world's central religions. The collection includes a substantial new introduction by the editor in the first volume and a full index in the last.
This volume examines a multitude of characters in Matthew's gospel
and provides an in-depth look at the different approaches currently
employed by scholars working with literary and reader-oriented
methods. Beginning with an introduction on 'the properties of
character' and the several aspects involved in the creation of
person, the contributors provide a close reading of numerous
characters and character types in the Gospel of Matthew. Including
Mary, King Herod, John the Baptist, Jesus the Preacher, Jesus the
Teacher, God the Father, the Roman Centurion, Peter, Women,
Gentiles, Scribes and Pharisees, and Romans. Such close studies aid
the understanding of different issues in Matthean characterization,
while also charting the development of hermeneutical vistas that
have developed in contemporary scholarship, resulting in a
collection of exegetical character studies that are
self-consciously working from a literary, narrative-critical,
reader-oriented, or related methodology.
The Language of Patient Feedback provides a unique insight into a
diverse range of issues related to healthcare. Through the
comprehensive and detailed interrogation of 29 million words of
online patient feedback on the NHS in England, as well as 11
million words of responses to the feedback from NHS providers, this
book: Uses a combination of computer-assisted and human analysis
(Corpus-Assisted Discourse Analysis) to examine the extent to which
characteristics like age and gender result in different types of
evaluation. Investigates why nurses, doctors, dentists and
receptionists are associated with very distinct types of feedback.
Demonstrates the ways that NHS staff respond to comments and what
this reveals about underlying institutional ideologies and
practices. Concludes with suggestions for key recommendations that
the NHS could act upon to improve the overall level of care it
provides, as well as reflecting on what patient evaluation can
actually tell us. The Language of Patient Feedback is key reading
for anyone undertaking research within corpus linguistics,
discourse analysis and health communication.
The Language of Patient Feedback provides a unique insight into a
diverse range of issues related to healthcare. Through the
comprehensive and detailed interrogation of 29 million words of
online patient feedback on the NHS in England, as well as 11
million words of responses to the feedback from NHS providers, this
book: Uses a combination of computer-assisted and human analysis
(Corpus-Assisted Discourse Analysis) to examine the extent to which
characteristics like age and gender result in different types of
evaluation. Investigates why nurses, doctors, dentists and
receptionists are associated with very distinct types of feedback.
Demonstrates the ways that NHS staff respond to comments and what
this reveals about underlying institutional ideologies and
practices. Concludes with suggestions for key recommendations that
the NHS could act upon to improve the overall level of care it
provides, as well as reflecting on what patient evaluation can
actually tell us. The Language of Patient Feedback is key reading
for anyone undertaking research within corpus linguistics,
discourse analysis and health communication.
This Encyclopedia brings together the vast array of historical
research into the reality of the man, the teachings, the acts, and
the events ascribed to him that have served as the foundational
story of one of the world's central religions. This kind of
historiography is not biography. The historical study of the Jesus
stories and the transmission of these stories through time have
been of seminal importance to historians of religion. Critical
historical examination has provided a way for scholars of
Christianity for centuries to analyze the roots of legend and
religion in a way that allows scholars an escape from the confines
of dogma, belief, and theological interpretation. In recent years,
historical Jesus studies have opened up important discussions
concerning anti-Semitism and early Christianity and the political
and ideological filtering of the Jesus story of early Christianity
through the Roman empire and beyond. Entries will cover the
classical studies that initiated the new historiography, the
theoretical discussions about authenticating the historical record,
the examination of sources that have led to the western
understanding of Jesus' teachings and disseminated myth of the
events concerning Jesus' birth and death. Subject areas include:
the history of the historical study of the New Testament: major
contributors and their works theoretical issues and concepts
methodologies and criteria historical genres and rhetorical styles
in the story of Jesus historical and rhetorical context of
martyrdom and messianism historical teachings of Jesus teachings
within historical context of ethics titles of Jesus historical
events in the life of Jesus historical figures in the life of Jesus
historical use of Biblical figures referenced in the Gospels places
and regions institutions the history of the New Testament within
the culture, politics, and law of the Roman Empire.
This Encyclopedia brings together the vast array of historical
research into the reality of the man, the teachings, the acts, and
the events ascribed to him that have served as the foundational
story of one of the world's central religions. This kind of
historiography is not biography. The historical study of the Jesus
stories and the transmission of these stories through time have
been of seminal importance to historians of religion. Critical
historical examination has provided a way for scholars of
Christianity for centuries to analyze the roots of legend and
religion in a way that allows scholars an escape from the confines
of dogma, belief, and theological interpretation. In recent years,
historical Jesus studies have opened up important discussions
concerning anti-Semitism and early Christianity and the political
and ideological filtering of the Jesus story of early Christianity
through the Roman empire and beyond. Entries will cover the
classical studies that initiated the new historiography, the
theoretical discussions about authenticating the historical record,
the examination of sources that have led to the western
understanding of Jesus' teachings and disseminated myth of the
events concerning Jesus' birth and death. Subject areas include:
the history of the historical study of the New Testament: major
contributors and their works theoretical issues and concepts
methodologies and criteria historical genres and rhetorical styles
in the story of Jesus historical and rhetorical context of
martyrdom and messianism historical teachings of Jesus teachings
within historical context of ethics titles of Jesus historical
events in the life of Jesus historical figures in the life of Jesus
historical use of Biblical figures referenced in the Gospels places
and regions institutions the history of the New Testament within
the culture, politics, and law of the Roman Empire.
In recent years the Christian faith has been challenged by
skeptics, including the New Atheists, who claim that belief in God
is simply not reasonable. Here prominent Christian philosopher C.
Stephen Evans offers a fresh, contemporary, and nuanced response.
He makes the case for belief in a personal God through an
exploration of natural "signs," which open our minds to theistic
possibilities and foster belief in the Christian revelation. Evans
then discusses why God's self-revelation is both authoritative and
authentic. This sophisticated yet accessible book provides a clear
account of the evidence for Christian faith, concluding that it
still makes sense to believe.
This Element examines technology-assisted grooming of children for
sex – henceforth, online grooming – as an illegal practice of
communicative manipulation and, as such, something that research
within the academic field of forensic linguistics is ideally placed
to help counter. The analysis draws upon online grooming datasets
of different sizes and provenance, including from law enforcement,
and deploys different analytic techniques from primarily discourse
analysis. Three features of online grooming discourse are focussed
on: groomers' use of manipulation tactics; groomers' abuse of power
asymmetries; and children's communication during online grooming.
The Element also discusses ways in which findings derived from
richly contextualised analysis of online grooming discourse can –
when combined with co-creation projects involving
child-safeguarding groups, children and lived-experience experts
– add considerable value to societal efforts to counter online
grooming and other forms of online child sexual exploitation and
abuse.
2013 Word Guild Award (Biblical Studies) A recognized expert in New
Testament Greek offers a historical understanding of the writing,
transmission, and translation of the New Testament and provides
cutting-edge insights into how we got the New Testament in its
ancient Greek and modern English forms. In part responding to those
who question the New Testament's reliability, Stanley Porter
rigorously defends the traditional goals of textual criticism: to
establish the original text. He reveals fascinating details about
the earliest New Testament manuscripts and shows that the textual
evidence supports an early date for the New Testament's formation.
He also explores the vital role translation plays in biblical
understanding and evaluates various translation theories. The book
offers a student-level summary of a vast amount of historical and
textual information.
This volume explores the theological heartbeat of the Old Testament
by examining three big ideas that communicate the Old Testament's
redemptive theology. Highly respected scholar Mark Boda shows how
three creedal expressions--the narrative, character, and relational
creeds--recur throughout the Old Testament and express its core
redemptive theology, in turn revealing how the redemptive pulse of
God expands to all of creation. He also traces these redemptive and
creational pulses into the New Testament and shows their relevance
for today's Christian community.
The Da Vinci Code. Misquoting Jesus. The Jesus Papers. The Gospel
of Judas. New portraits of Jesus continue to stir up interest and
debate. The more unusual the portrait, the more it departs from the
traditional view of Jesus, and the more attention it receives in
the popular media. Critical study of the Gospels has often shed
light on the Jesus of history - but has also distorted the Gospels
and rendered Jesus unrecognizable. Why are some scholars so prone
to fabricate a new Jesus? What methods and assumptions predispose
them to distort the record? Why is the public so eager to accept
such claims without question? Is there a more sober approach to
finding the real Jesus? Craig Evans offers insights into the
methods and biases of modern interpreters, whether scholars
associated with the Jesus Seminar or popularizers like Michael
Baigent and Dan Brown. He examines how we got today's New Testament
text, how ancient historians did their work, what second-century
Gnosticism was all about, and the way first-century Jewish and
Greek culture informs scholarly study of the Gospels. Readers will
come away with a new appreciation of the value and limits of
contemporary biblical research.
The, Uranium Seekers, saga began in 1976 when world-famous
Hollywood, California photographer, Martin, was contracted to come
to Utah and begin documenting, paying photographic tribute to,
uranium miners, native Americans, and the Vanadium King uranium and
vanadium mines on Temple Mountain, Emery County, Utah. The essence
of the project was to pay tribute to the persons who traversed Zane
Grey's and John Ford's great western expanse in search of uranium
ore, one rock at a time, from before Madame Curies trips to the,
then, present, and to remind the world's public that uranium was,
and still is, used to kill, not humanity, rather cancer. I harbored
the hope that by going back to the first uranium rocks the nuclear
industry would re-evaluate the physical structure of nuclear
reactors, one cubic yard at a time. Nuclear reactors, when built,
witness Fukushima Daiichi, are still being created with too much
haste. Like the uranium miners themselves, it's the hands of the
humanity who cast the cement forms in which the reactors rest which
determines safety. I also, rather naively, hoped when uranium's
harmonous utilization was embraced its destructive military
reality, throughout the world, would melt. Even with the support of
the fine Beverly Hills, California literary agent, Clyde M.
Vandeburg of Vandeburg-Linkletter Associates who represented Ronald
and Nancy Reagan, Barry Goldwater, and many others at the time, the
national and international events at Three-Mile Island and
Chernobyl put Uranium Seekers and Martins great photographs to bed
for decades. However, recently I learned the Utah Historical
Quarterly Unpublished Manuscripts from the Department of Community
and Culture at the Utah State Archives had harbored some of the
manuscript material for decades and the recent events at Fukushima
Daiichi made uranium part of the international conversation once
again, I decided to dust off Martin's work and snatches of the
original material for Uranium Seekers.
For those who want to go deeper in their understanding of the canon
of Scripture, leading international scholars provide cutting-edge
perspectives on various facets of the biblical writings, how those
writings became canonical Scripture, and why canon matters. Craig
Evans begins by helping those new to the field understand the
different versions of the Hebrew Bible as well as the books of the
Apocrypha and the Pseudepigrapha. Later essays also help beginners
by explaining "canon" and the development of canons in various
Jewish and Christian communities, the much-debated tripartite canon
of the Hebrew Scriptures, and questions of authority. But the book
also includes insightful explorations and perspectives to challenge
more advanced readers, starting with Septuagint and Dead Sea
Scrolls expert Emanuel Tov delving into the complexities of
biblical writing and moving into a critical investigation of the
usefulness of extracanonical Gospels for historical Jesus research
and an exploration of the relationship of Paul to the canonization
process. The result is a thought-provoking book that concludes with
discussion of an issue at the fore today--the theological
implications of canon.
ContributorsJames H. Charlesworth
Stephen G. Dempster
Craig A. Evans
Lee Martin McDonald
Stanley E. Porter
Emanuel Tov
Jonathan R. Wilson
R. Glenn Wooden
"The eight essays in this volume form a very worthwhile set of
considerations of the emerging canons of the Jewish and Christian
Bibles. The complexity of the processes of canonization is
refreshingly tackled on the basis of both internal and external
evidence. Two essays cover some of the implications of the evidence
of the Septuagint, two review especially the internal data of the
Old Testament and Paul, two put in their places the Old Testament
Pseudepigrapha and the New Testament Apocrypha, and two consider
the theological bases of the authority that lies behind the text of
Scripture. This two-by-two collection is a veritable ark full of
expert analysis to enable any reader to navigate the flood of
recent writing on canon. Some studies rescue old theories for a new
generation; others provide polychromatic perspectives for a fresh
start."--George J. Brooke, University of Manchester
Unplug the clock. Turn off the television. Put a stack of John
Hartford albums on the stereo. Sit back and take a trip to the
hills of eastern Kentucky. Come meet other real people among the
hills, but don't expect to see any stereotypes of hillbillies or
moonshine stills. His tribute to these gentle people is, in the
best sense, poetic. His writing flows like a creek running down the
piney mountains. Royce has given the world an impressive record of
one of the last remnants of American culture still uncontaminated
by a plastic mentality. It is hoped this warm and beautiful book
will not be an epitaph to the mountain culture, but the start of
the renaissance of their natural lifestyle. -Greg Bailey, Columbia
Missourian Country Miles are Longer than City Miles, a sort of
Kentucky Foxfire that examines with reverence about 20 of the
state's artisans and their work. Royce's book is a genuine artcraft
of its own kind, a lovingly carved little piece of work that exudes
vibrant enthusiasm from every page. It is good to see ourselves as
others see us. In this case, it can bring us back to some sense of
ourselves. Commitment to excellence is a rare enough quality in
most any human undertaking, and it is this quality that Craig Evan
Royce is concerned with in Country Miles are Longer than City
Miles. -Review by Don Edwards Herald-Leader Literary Columnist The
Lexington Herald-Leader This is a craft book of a different genre.
It is the story of the inseparable love that the true craftsman has
for his work - and his respect for nature. Each chapter opens with
a sepia photo - and every priceless photo tells a story. Interviews
with the individual craft folk are written in dialect - and
thefirst-hand mountain memoirs are indeed moving and enlightening
simultaneously. Author Royce has compiled a unique and inspiring
glimpse into the art of the southern highlands from which all who
read, be they craftsmen or not, can benefit. -edited by Susan
Bruno, The NEWPORT NEWS DAILY PRESS
The New Testament is of prime importance for understanding early
Jewish and Christian messianism and eschatology. Yet often the New
Testament presumes a background and context of belief without fully
articulating it. Early Jewish and Christian messianism and
eschatology, after all, did not emerge in a vacuum; they developed
out of early Jewish hopes that had their roots in the Old
Testament. A knowledge of early Jewish literature, and especially
of the Dead Sea Scrolls from Qumran, is essential for understanding
the shape of these ideas at the turn of the era. In this book, the
inaugural volume in the Studies in the Dead Sea Scrolls and Related
Literature series, Craig Evans and Peter Flint have assembled eight
essays from outstanding scholars who address this issue from a
variety of angles. After an introduction by the editors, successive
essays deal with the Old Testament foundations of messianism; the
figure of Daniel at Qumran; the Teacher of Righteousness; the
expectation of the end in the Scrolls; and Jesus, Paul, and John
seen in light of Qumran.
Covering residential, commercial and agricultural leases the fifth
edition provides guidance on a wide range of topics including local
authority tenancies, crofts, the Agricultural Holdings Acts and
valuations of market rent. The fifth edition: - Takes full account
of recent legislative changes including the Private Housing
(Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016 and the Land and Buildings
Transaction Tax (Scotland) Act 2013. - Details relevant new case
law and the many changes in residential leases including
legislation to abolish sales of public sector housing (the ‘Right
to Buy’ scheme) and the introduction of the new ‘private
residential tenancy’ covering renting rights. - Covers the
Scottish Law Commission’s review of commercial leases regarding
how leases are terminated. - Covers the new Modern Limited Duration
Tenancy for agricultural tenants, introduced by the Land Reform
(Scotland) Act 2016.
total freedom from such impulse eating.
In recent decades, the church and academy have witnessed intense
debates concerning the concept of penal substitution to describe
Christ's atoning sacrifice. Some claim it promotes violence,
glorifies suffering and death, and amounts to divine child abuse.
Others argue it plays a pivotal role in classical Christian
doctrine. Here world-renowned New Testament scholar Simon
Gathercole offers an exegetical and historical defense of the
traditional substitutionary view of the atonement. He provides
critical analyses of various interpretations of the atonement and
places New Testament teaching in its Old Testament and Greco-Roman
contexts, demonstrating that the interpretation of atonement in the
Pauline corpus must include substitution.
In some of the church's history, Scripture has been pitted against
tradition and vice versa. Prominent New Testament scholar Edith
Humphrey, who understands the issue from both Protestant and
Catholic/Orthodox perspectives, revisits this perennial point of
tension. She demonstrates that the Bible itself reveals the
importance of tradition, exploring how the Gospels, Acts, and the
Epistles show Jesus and the apostles claiming the authority of
tradition as God's Word, both written and spoken. Arguing that
Scripture and tradition are not in opposition but are necessarily
and inextricably intertwined, Humphrey defends tradition as God's
gift to the church. She also works to dismantle rigid views of sola
scriptura while holding a high view of Scripture's authority.
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