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Religion and Cult (Hardcover)
Sigmund Mowinckel; Edited by K.C. Hanson; Translated by John Sj Sheehan
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R1,089
R879
Discovery Miles 8 790
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This volume brings together some of Mowinckel's most important and
interesting work on the prophets. He begins by introducing the
reader to the method of tradition history and how it is related to
form criticism and literary criticism. From this groundwork, he
goes on to explore how this method is essential for analyzing the
prophetic literature in the Hebrew Bible.In order to make it more
helpful for students, each essay has been supplemented with
additional notes and bibliography to show where the discussion has
continued since Mowinckel. A bibliography of Mowinckel's works in
English and a bibliography of essays evaluating Mowinckel's
contributions are also included. This will provide an excellent
supplementary textbook for courses on the prophets. Key Features:
provides an introduction in Old Testament tradition history an
editor's foreword highlights the importance of Mowinckel's work
includes updated notes and bibliographies includes chapters not
previously published in the U.S. indexes of ancient sources and
authors
- Provides a fresh perspective on the Book of Acts
- Editor's foreword highlights the importance of Dibelius's
work
- Includes updated notes and bibliographies
- Indexes of ancient sources and authors
This volume contains some of the most important and enduring work
of Gerhard von Rad, the most influential Old Testament theologian
of the twentieth century. The chapters cover a broad range of
topics, including the doctrine of creation, memory and tradition in
Deuteronomy, historical writing in ancient Israel, cultic language
in the Psalms, and the Old Testament worldview.
Explores form, tradition, and theologyThe chapters in this volume
provide the general reader an opportunity to learn from one of the
greatest biblical scholars of the twentieth century. Beginning with
the most general and moving to focused topics, this work provides a
rationale for continuing to engage the Old Testament in the modern
world. Combining his research strengths in the literary history of
Israel, form criticism, tradition history, and the history of
religion, this volume covers narrative, prophecy, and the
Psalms.Rather than artifacts of a former generation, these essays
are as fresh as ever in their perspective. To make it more helpful
for students, each essay has been expanded with additional notes
and bibliography to show where the discussion has continued since
Gunkel. This work will provide an excellent supplementary textbook
for courses in the Old Testament or Bible.
This collection of essays is drawn from a series of previous
collections to which the author has contributed that were designed
to honour senior scholars in the discipline of Old Testament study.
Each of these essays reflects a distinct intention depending on the
nature of the original collection in which they appeared and the
scholar who was being honoured. Taken together, however, this
collection amounts to an articulation of Brueggemann's distinctive
approach to theological interpretation of the Old Testament.
Already in his major volume on Old Testament theology, Brueggemann
proposed a dynamism of tension, dispute, and contradiction as the
text of ancient Israel sought to give voice to the mystery of God
as a sustaining and disruptive agent in the life of the world. Over
a long period of time, this collection reflects the author's
growing clarity about the task of Old Testament theology. It
further reflects on the nature of the biblical text and the way in
which the God who inhabits the text runs beyond all of our attempts
to define and explain. These essays reflect not so much on
methodological issues, but take up the substantive questions that
regularly occupied these ancient text-makers.
This work brings together some of Zimmerli's work on Old Testament
theology and the prophets. He is especially renowned for his works
on Ezekiel, Jeremiah, and the prophetic exper-ience. It includes
additional notes and bibliography for each essay to show how the
discussion has continued.
Franz Delitzsch's lectures in 1902 and 1903 set off the Babel-Bible
controversy, which rocked Europe and North America. In this searing
critique of Delitzsch, Gunkel provides his own analysis of the
relationship between ancient Israel and Babylon. In this edition,
Gunkel's original work is newly translated, with a new Foreword,
notes, bibliographies, and indexes.
Biblical faith is passionately and relentlessly material in its
emphasis. This claim is rooted in the conviction that the creator
God loves the creation and summons creation to be in sync with the
will of the creator God. This collection of essays is focussed on
the bodily life of the world as it ordered in all of its
problematic political and economic forms. The phrase of the title
'all flesh' in the flood narrative of Genesis 9 refers to all
living creatures who are in covenant with God - human beings,
animals, birds, and fish - as recipients of God's grace, as
dependent upon God's generosity, and as destined for praise and
obedience to God. The insistence on the materiality of life as the
subject of the Bible means that the difficult issues of economics
and the demanding questions of politics are front and centre in the
text. So the Pentateuch pivots around the Exodus narrative and the
emancipation from an unbearable context of abusive labour
practices. In a similar manner, the prophets endlessly address such
questions of social policy and the wisdom teachers reflect on how
to manage the material things of life and social relationships for
the well-being of the community. This emphasis, pervasive in these
essays, is a powerful alternative and a strong resistance against
all of the contemporary efforts to transcend (escape!) the material
into some form of the 'spiritual'. All around us are efforts to
find an easier, more harmonious faith. This may be evoked simply
because of a desire to shield economic, political advantage from
the inescapable critique of biblical faith. Such a temptation is a
serious misreading of the Bible and a critical misjudgment about
the nature of human existence. Thus the Bible addressed the most
urgent issues of our day, and refuses the 'religious temptation'
that avoids lived reality where the power of God is a work.
In this new edition of Gerhard von Rad's classic work on the Moses
traditions, the reader is provided with a more polished text,
cross-references to von Rad's other works, an updated bibliography,
Scripture index, and a new foreword by Walter Brueggemann. A German
Lutheran pastor, University professor and a prolific Old Testament
scholar, Gerhard von Rad sought a revival of Old Testament
appreciation from a readership disheartened by two world wars.
Hanson brings this important work to the present generation in the
hopes of provoking the same reaction.
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Didascalia Apostolorum (Paperback)
R. Hugh Connolly; Foreword by K.C. Hanson; Aidan Bellenger
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R1,187
R954
Discovery Miles 9 540
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