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This is the fourth volume in the series of collaborations between
the Department of Bible in Tel Aviv University, Israel, and the
Faculty of Theology in the University of the Ruhr, Bochum, Germany.
This symposium, held in Bochum in 1995, discussed a topic important
for both communities of believers, starting with the Bible and
tracking its role through the different stages of the respective
tradition-histories. This time the theme was eschatology. The
participants engaged in a lively discussion (from the Jewish side)
on messianism and Zionism, Qumran, Mishnah and Kabbalah, and (from
the Christian side) on the Bible, recent Protestant ethics and
systematic theology. The volume concludes with the report of a
panel discussion on the essence of eschatology in Jewish and
Christian thinking: is it a spiritualized idea or a material
expectation for the world?
This volume contains papers from the third symposium held by the
University of Tel Aviv, Israel, and the Ruhr University, Bochum,
Germany, with the aim of furthering dialogue between Jewish and
Christian biblical scholars. The papers examine the ways in which
political issues and events are reflected in the Bible and in the
postbiblical literature, the term 'theopolitics' expressing the
conviction of both communities that the politics of human life have
always been and continue to be subject to the rule and providence
of God. The hope of the symposium is that through examination of
the ways in which Jews and Christians have reflected upon political
and ethical theories there may arise new possibilities for better
mutual understanding.
This volume brings together Jewish and Christian scholars with
perspectives on Creation in the Bible (Tanakh, Old Testament, New
Testament), in ancient Egypt and Israel, and at Qumran, as well as
contemporary theological, philosophical and political issues raised
by the biblical, Jewish and Christian concepts of creation.
The existence of evil in the world represents one of the most
complex problems for those who believe in God. Here, a range of
Jewish and Christian contributors examine the issue of evil in the
Bible and its impact on Judaism and Christianity from a variety of
perspectives. For example, how has Jewish mysticism explained evil,
and what were Luther's thoughts on the topic? The dialogue between
specialists from different fields allows a broad overview of this
problematic issue.
This book continues a series of volumes containing the papers read
at an annual conference held in turn by Tel Aviv and Bochum in the
course of a co-operation between the Lester and Sally Entin Faculty
of Humanities, Chaim Rosenberg School of Jewish Studies, the
Department of Bible of Tel Aviv University and the Faculty of
Protestant Theology in the University of the Ruhr, Bochum, since
1985. As a collection the book focuses on the important role
religious views have played in critical moments during Jewish and
Christian history. It argues for the significance that the role
religious beliefs play in political and economic decision-making
and the formation of worldviews; as well as demonstrating common
convictions held by both Jewish and Christians that can be used as
a foundation to find similar answers to actual problems. Focusing
on the conference held in March 2005 at Tel Aviv, the book contains
a collected biography of the literature quoted as well as a list of
standard abbreviations.
This collection of papers arrives from the eighth annual symposium
between the Chaim Rosenberg School of Jewish Studies of Tel Aviv
University and the Faculty of Protestant Theology of the University
of Ruhr, Bochum held in Bochum, June 2007. The general theme of the
Decalogue was examined in its various uses by both Jewish and
Christian traditions throughout the centuries to the present. Three
papers deal with the origin of the Decalogue: Yair Hoffman on the
rare mentioning of the Decalogue in the Hebrew Bible outside the
Torah; E. L. Greenstein considers that already A. ibn Ezra doubted
that God himself spoke in the Ten Commandments and states that more
likely their rhetoric indicates it was Moses who proclaimed the
Decalogue; A. Bar-Tour speaks about the cognitive aspects of the
Decalogue revelation story and its frame. The second part considers
the later use of the Decalogue: G. Nebe describes its use with
Paul; P. Wick discusses the symbolic radicalization of two
commandments in James and the Sermon on the Mount; A. Oppenheimer
explains the removal of the Decalogue from the daily Shem'a prayer
as a measure against the minim's claim of a higher religious
importance of the Decalogue compared to the Torah; W. Geerlings
examines Augustine's quotations of the Decalogue; H. Reventlow
depicts its central place in Luther's catechisms; Y. Yacobson
discusses its role with Hasidism. The symposium closes with papers
on systematic themes: C. Frey follows a possible way to legal
universalism; G. Thomas describes the Decalogue as an "Ethics of
Risk"; F. H. Beyer/M. Waltemathe seek an educational perspective.
This collection of papers arrives from the eighth annual symposium
between the Chaim Rosenberg School of Jewish Studies of Tel Aviv
University and the Faculty of Protestant Theology of the University
of Ruhr, Bochum held in Bochum, June 2007. The general theme of the
Decalogue was examined in its various uses by both Jewish and
Christian traditions throughout the centuries to the present. Three
papers deal with the origin of the Decalogue: Yair Hoffman on the
rare mentioning of the Decalogue in the Hebrew Bible outside the
Torah; E. L. Greenstein considers that already A. ibn Ezra doubted
that God himself spoke in the Ten Commandments and states that more
likely their rhetoric indicates it was Moses who proclaimed the
Decalogue; A. Bar-Tour speaks about the cognitive aspects of the
Decalogue revelation story and its frame. The second part considers
the later use of the Decalogue: G. Nebe describes its use with
Paul; P. Wick discusses the symbolic radicalization of two
commandments in James and the Sermon on the Mount; A. Oppenheimer
explains the removal of the Decalogue from the daily Shem'a prayer
as a measure against the minim's claim of a higher religious
importance of the Decalogue compared to the Torah; W. Geerlings
examines Augustine's quotations of the Decalogue; H. Reventlow
depicts its central place in Luther's catechisms; Y. Yacobson
discusses its role with Hasidism. The symposium closes with papers
on systematic themes: C. Frey follows a possible way to legal
universalism; G. Thomas describes the Decalogue as an Ethics of
Risk; F. H. Beyer/M. Waltemathe seek an educational perspective.
This volume publishes the symposium papers of a joint conference
held in Bochum, Germay in 1990 between the University of Tel Aviv,
Israel, and the University of the Ruhr, Bochum. The aim of the
conference was to show that the close cooperation of Jewish and
Christian biblical scholars can help both sides to a deeper
understanding of their common biblical heritage. This collection
focuses in particular on the theme of 'Justice and Righteousness'.
This volume is also a Festschrift for Benjamin Uffenheimer, who was
instrumental in forming the symposium.
The volume contains the contributions to a symposium in which
specialists in different fields worked together in the attempt to
throw by their cooperation more light on the conditions -
theological convictions and worldview, political climate, influence
of state officials, educational institutions and churches - which
were influential in the development of biblical studies in the
second half of the 19th century. The discussion originated with a
special problem: the thesis of William Farmer, one of the
co-editors of the volume, that the appointment of Heinrich Julius
Holtzmann, who defended the priority of the gospel of Mark as the
oldest synoptic gospel, to the New Testament professorship in
Strasbourg in 1872 was the result of a direct intervention of the
emperial chancellor Bismarck in the context of the kulturkampf, who
wished thereby to weaken the Roman Catholic position defending the
supremacy of the chair of St Peter by the authority of the gospel
of St Matthew (Mt 16,18). The question belongs in the broader
context of the presuppositions of Bible exegesis in the second half
of the 19th century. As both editors agreed that the matter is not
yet finally settled, it seemed to be essential for coming to deeper
insights into the conditions under which biblical exegesis was
enacted in the 19th century to broaden the scenery and to include
other aspects that might throw more light on a period widely
unknown to many scholars belonging to the present generation.
Therefore specialists of different fields joined a symposium in
order to elucidate from their respective viewpoints and interests
basic themes and methods of biblical exegesis, scientific theology
and the relations between state and university in the 19th centruy,
especially during the period of the second Reich. But the themes
were not restricted to this special area. They included also a
wider outlook into the first half of the century and across the
borders of Germany into other European countries. So the volume
contains a collection of essays which have in common that all of
them contribute to a better knowledge of the inner and outer
conditions which formed climate and results of Biblical
interpretation in the period.
These papers were presented to a unique conference held in Israel
in December 1985, sponsored by Tel Aviv University and the
University of Bochum in the Federal Republic of Germany. Discussion
of Christian and Jewish exegesis in historical perspective was not
only mutually illuminating, but also laid the foundations for a new
level of Jewish-Christian dialogue. The papers presented in this
volume are: H. Graf Reventlow, Humanist Exegesis: The famous Hugo
Grotius. Y. Hoffman, The Technique of Quotation as an
Interpretative Device. D. Flusser, Past and Future according to the
Creative Exegesis of the Hebrew Bible in Paul's Epistle to the
Hebrews. P. Carny, Uniqueness And Particularity in Philo's
Exegesis. J.S. Levinger, Maimonides' Exegesis of the Book of Job.
M. Banitt, Exegesis and Metaphrasis. A. Touitou, Courants et
contre-courants dans l'exTgFse biblique juive en France au moyen
Gge. R. Liwak, Literary Individuality as a Problem of Hermeneutics.
M. Dubois, Mystical and Realistic Elements in the Exegesis and
Hermeneutics of Thomas Aquinas. H. Smolinsky, The Bible and its
Exegesis in the Controversies about Reform and Reformation. J.
Wallmann, Martin Luther's Judaism and Islam. C. Frey, The Function
of the Bible in Recent Protestant Ethics. B. Uffenheimer, Trends in
Modern Jewish Biblical Research. K. Raiser, A New Reading of the
Bible? Ecumenical Perspectives from Latin America and Korea.
Volume 2 of "History of Biblical Interpretation" deals with the
most extensive period under examination in this four-volume set. It
begins in Asia Minor in the late fourth century with Bishop
Theodore of Mopsuestia, the founder of a school of interpretation
that sought to accentuate the literal meaning of the Bible and
thereby stood out from the tradition of antiquity. It ends with
another outsider, a thousand years later in England, who by the
presuppositions of his thought stood at the end of an era: John
Wyclif. In between these two interpreters, this volume presents the
history of biblical interpretation from late antiquity until the
end of the Middle Ages by examining the lives, works, and
interpretive practices of Didymus the Blind, Jerome, Ambrose,
Augustine, Gregory the Great, Isidore of Seville, the Venerable
Bede, Alcuin, John Scotus Eriugena, Abelard, Rupert of Deutz, Hugo
of St. Victor, Joachim of Fiore, Thomas Aquinas, Bonaventure,
Rashi, Abraham ibn Ezra, and Nicolas of Lyra. Translation of:
Reventlow, Henning Graf. Epochen der Bibelauslegung. Munchen, C. H.
Beck.
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