Christology, Controversy, and Community: New Testament Essays in Honour of David R. Catchpole

Voorkant
David R. Catchpole, David G. Horrell, C. Christopher Mark Tuckett
BRILL, 1 jan 2000 - 404 pagina's
This collection of essays by an international team of prominent New Testament scholars is in honour of David Catchpole, recently retired from his position as the Saint Luke's Foundation Professor of Theological Studies at the University of Exeter, UK. The essays represent a range of approaches and topics, connected together by a focus on various kinds of christological claim, whether by the historical Jesus, in the Q tradition, John, Paul or the synoptics, and their connection with controversy and the construction of early Christian community. The contributors are: Stephen Barton, Peder Borgen, Richard Burridge, Marinus de Jonge, James Dunn, Earle Ellis, Birger Gerhardsson, Michael Goulder, Morna Hooker, John Kloppenburg Verbin, Robert Morgan, John Painter, Ronald Piper, Peter Richardson, Christopher Rowland, Graham Stanton, N.T. Wright, and the editors.
 

Inhoudsopgave

Is the Crux of Mark 146162
1
Is There a New Paradigm?
25
The Earthly Jesus in the Synoptic Parables
49
FirstCentury Houses and Qs Setting
73
Resurrection in
93
2830
109
The Torah and Christology
135
Towards a Critical Appropriation of the Sermon on
157
Christology Conflict
231
Satan Demons and the Absence of Exorcisms in
253
Christian Community in the Light of the Gospel
279
Preformed Traditions and Their Implications
303
Pauls Corporate
321
Some Observations
345
Index of Biblical References
379
Index of Modern Authors
400

10 Elijah with Moses or a Rift in the PreMarkan Lute
193
Christology Controversy and Community in the Gospel
209

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Over de auteur (2000)

David G. Horrell, Ph.D. (1994), University of Cambridge, is Lecturer in New Testament at the University of Exeter. Christopher M. Tuckett, Ph.D. (1979), University of Lancaster, is Lecturer in New Testament at the University of Oxford.

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