Tucker S. Ferda , Jesus and His Promised Second Coming: Jewish Eschatology and Christian Origins (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans, 2024), pp. xxvi + 538. $69.99
August 2025
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Journal article
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Scottish Journal of Theology
Tucker S. Ferda , Jesus and His Promised Second Coming: Jewish Eschatology and Christian Origins (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans, 2024), pp. xxvi + 538. $69.99
August 2025
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Journal article
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Scottish Journal of Theology
5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Scripture, dissent and ecclesial discernment in the second century
March 2025
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Chapter
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Die Heilige Schrift in der katholischen Kirche/Holy Scripture in the Catholic Church
What are the apocryphal gospels?
February 2025
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Internet publication
These diverse ancient works expand upon the four canonical Gospels in creative and sometimes subversive ways.
Simon Peter in scripture and memory
January 2025
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Dataset
<p>This record holds extracts from the website (https://simonpeter.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/), supplying supplementary ancient source material for the following two books: </p>
<p>• Bockmuehl, Markus. 2010. <i>The Remembered Peter in Ancient Reception and Modern Debate</i>. Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament 262. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck. </p>
<p>• Bockmuehl, Markus. 2012. <i>Simon Peter in Scripture and Memory</i>. Grand Rapids: Baker Academic. </p>
<p>The aim is to facilitate access to some of the primary source texts illustrating the profile of Simon Peter in the early church. </p>
<p>Use the PDFs to explore the evidence from five successive historical periods or “Generations” of memory related to Peter (a designation of convenience explained in both volumes). Note also the separate PDFs providing a Key to the Abbreviations and a partial reference bibliography of sources cited. </p>
<p>Not all sources listed here are discussed in detail in the two books, and the inclusion of material under “Generation" 3 and especially 4 is deliberately eclectic and illustrative.</p>
<p>For biblical texts and/or translations, only references are provided. Original languages are here limited to Greek and Latin; if time and resources permit, others may be added in the future.</p>
Introduction
December 2024
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Chapter
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The New Cambridge Companion to Jesus
Introduction
December 2024
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Chapter
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The New Cambridge Companion to Jesus
5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
The New Cambridge Companion to Jesus
December 2024
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Book
The New Cambridge Companion to Jesus serves as the most up to date guide and resource for understanding Jesus' multifaceted legacy, enduring impact over time and space, and relevance in today's world. Integrating textual, historical, theological, and cultural perspectives, the essays, specially commissioned for this volume, also offer a fresh and diverse overview of Jesus' significance in contemporary global contexts. Key features include insights into Jesus' life and teachings, his role in different religious traditions, and his influence on art, music, and global cultures. The volume also addresses contemporary issues of poverty, race, and power dynamics, making it especially relevant for today's readers. The Companion offers a diversity of perspectives from which to approach the unique identity and importance of Jesus beyond the 2020s, whether in relation to Christianity's cultural and existential crises in the Americas, its precipitous decline in Western Europe, or its unprecedented growth and proliferation in Africa and Asia.
The risen Jesus
November 2024
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Chapter
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The New Cambridge Companion to Jesus
The resurrection of Jesus, pivotal to Christian history and praxis, is universally attested in early Christian sources, even if often critiqued or sidelined as myth or apologetics in modern scholarship. Paul’s letters and of the Gospels in their narrative diversity document the resurrection’s transformative and abiding impact on Jesus’s followers. In bringing the aspirations of myth and metaphor to fruition in time, the resurrection of Jesus is both an event in history and yet constitutes a new reality that transcends the register of available language and analogy.
Gospels, history, Paul, theology, resurrection
Introduction
October 2024
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Chapter
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Holman Hunt and the Light of the World in Oxford
Christ stopped at Ephraim (John 11:54)
October 2024
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Chapter
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Early High Christology: John among the New Testament Writers
Frances M. Young, Scripture, the Genesis of Doctrine. Doctrine and Scripture in Early Christianity l. Eerdmans, Grand Rapids, Michigan. 2023. Hbk.pp.xxvii+280. $40.99. ISBN 9780802882981
September 2024
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Other
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Journal of Anglican Studies
The myth of creedless Judaism
September 2024
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Chapter
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The Creed and the Scriptures
Friendships between Jews and Christians in antiquity
April 2024
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Chapter
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Looking In, Looking Out: Jews and Non-Jews in Mutual Contemplation. Essays for Martin Goodman on His 70th Birthday
Holman Hunt and the Light of the World in Oxford
January 2024
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Book
Introduction
January 2024
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Chapter
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Holman Hunt and the Light of the World in Oxford
This book examines William Holman Hunt's painting The Light of the World, exploring its artistic genesis, international impact, theological complexity, colonial implications, portrayal of divine light, and role in prompting Christian conversion. The painting's contemporary relevance is highlighted in chapters re-assessing its colonial underpinnings and engaging contemporary portraiture in traditional religious idiom as a medium for hospitable engagement of each individual's sacred value. Through such analyses, the book provides a multifaceted exploration of Hunt's masterpiece and illuminates its enduring significance for Christian art, theology, and transformative religious experience.
The Creed and the Scriptures
January 2024
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Journal article
Jesus 'the just'
August 2023
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Journal article
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Journal for the Study of the New Testament
While praise of the righteous is endemic in both Jewish and Christian Scripture, its application to named individuals is remarkably rare throughout. In the New Testament, it is reserved for pre-Christian saints and especially for Jesus himself—most clearly in Acts. Responding to the suggestion (by Richard Hays and others) that ‘the Just’ was specifically a messianic title, the article shows instead that its application to figures like James the brother of Jesus and Simon the son of Onias II documents part of a development toward the rabbinic usage of the Tzaddiq. The Just is a typically retrospective honorific designating a rare observant and pious person, possibly suffering and persecuted but divinely vindicated and endowed with charismatic qualities, who facilitates mediation between God and human beings and helps sustain the world.
Der jüdische Christus, sein Volk und die Torah: Antwort auf Helmut Hoping
July 2023
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Chapter
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Jesus, der Messias Israels? Messianisches Judentum und christliche Theologie im Gespräch
Reno contra mundum
May 2023
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Journal article
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First Things
RECENSIONES
January 2023
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Journal article
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Biblica
The Resurrection of Jesus
January 2023
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Other
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BIBLICA
apostle
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
Apostle (traditional)
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
Bultmann, Rudolf
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
SBTMR
Bultmann, Rudolf (1884-1976)
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
Corinthian correspondence
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
SBTMR
crucifixion
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
SBTMR
Egerton Papyrus
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
Foreword
February 2022
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Chapter
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When Christians Face Persecution: Theological Perspectives from the New Testament
Foreword to <i>When Christians Face Persecution: Theological Perspectives from the New Testament</i>
SBTMR
Freer Logion
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
SBTMR
Hebrews, Gospel according to the
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
SBTMR
Historical Jesus, Quest of the
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
SBTMR
Letters of Paul
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
SBTMR
maranatha
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
SBTMR
messiah
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
SBTMR
nihilianism
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
SBTMR
paradise
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
SBTMR
parousia
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
SBTMR
Paul, Acts of St
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
SBTMR
Paul, St
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
SBTMR
Peter, Acts of St
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
SBTMR
Peter, Epistles of St
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
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Peter, Preaching of St
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
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Peter, St
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
SBTMR
Rylands Library Papyrus P. 52
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
SBTMR
sabbath
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
SBTMR
Sadducees
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
SBTMR
Scripture on the Birth and Infancy of Jesus
February 2022
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Chapter
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An Introduction to Child Theology
These essays in this book are pastoral and scholarly, to encourage parents to nurture and foster Christian family life by learning from scripture and history.
Religion
Shekhinah
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
SBTMR
synoptic problem
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
SBTMR
Thomas, Apocalypse of
February 2022
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Chapter
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The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
SBTMR
The New Testament and the Creed
January 2022
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Book
THIS JESUS: Martyr, Lord, Messiah
January 2022
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Book
This concise but very thought-provoking work on the historical Jesus by Markus Bockmuehl posits that the historical man of Jesus cannot be separated from the Christ of faith. Taking a traditional argument and imprinting it with the finest scholarship, Bockmuehl refers to a wide range of canonical and non-canonical historical texts, ranging from Roman historians Tacitus and xxx to Jewish historian Josephus, and through Christian sources as well as the Gospels. His conclusion suggests that Jesus was indeed the Messiah, but not the Messiah expected by his contemporaries.
Being Emmanuel: Matthew's ever-present Jesus?
December 2021
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Journal article
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New Testament Studies
Among the New Testament Gospels, Matthew most emphatically stresses the continued presence of Jesus throughout his ministry and with his disciples after Easter. This is despite sensitivity to the challenge of the cross and experiences of absence or deprivation. Structurally, the Gospel develops this affirmation in relation to the narrative of Jesus’ birth and incarnation, to his ministry, to the governance of the Christian community in its apostolic mission to Israel and the nations. Matthew never quite articulates how this continued presence actually works, whether in spatial or sacramental or pneumatological terms. And yet the emphatic correlation of ‘Jesus’ and ‘Emmanuel’ confirms that each is constituted by the other: being ‘God with us’ (Matt 1.23) means precisely to ‘save his people’ (1.21), and vice versa.
presence, Temple, salvation, absence, incarnation, mission, resurrection, Shekhinah, church
Christian Persecution in Antiquity
September 2021
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Book
Wolfram Kinzig, in Christian Persecution in Antiquity, examines the motivations and legal mechanisms behind the various outbursts of violence against Christians, and chronologically tracks the course of Roman oppression of this new religion ...
Petrusliteratur und Petrusarchäologie. Römische Begegnungen. Edited by Jörg Frey and Martin Wallraff. (Rom und Protestantismus Schriften des Melanchthon-Zentrums in Rom, 4.) Pp. vi + 317 incl. 5 ills and 1 table. Tübin...
April 2021
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Journal article
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The Journal of Ecclesiastical History
The presence of the ascended Son in the Gospel of John
February 2021
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Journal article
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Nova et Vetera
Introduction: The Mok Family’s Abancourt Book of Hours
January 2021
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Chapter
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The Abancourt Hours [阿 邦古日課 書]
illumination of books and manuscripts, French
Introduction: Dead Sea Scrolls research in Oxford
December 2020
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Journal article
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Revue de Qumran
The New Testament
October 2020
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Chapter
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The Oxford Handbook of Christmas
5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
The New Testament
October 2020
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Chapter
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The Oxford Handbook of Christmas
This chapter examines several distinct strands in the New Testament’s reflection on Jesus’ Nativity: from the mystery surrounding his origins in the earliest Gospel, Mark, to the respective infancy narratives of Matthew and Luke, to John’s mystical language of the Word’s origins, and non-narrative conceptions of Jesus’ coming into the world in Paul, other letter-writers, and Revelation. It argues that the slender ancient accounts of ‘Jesus becoming Jesus’ nonetheless offer a rich tapestry of insights on the Incarnation at the heart of Christmas. Brief engagement with the early reception of these texts in theology and apologetics, literary production and art, devotion and liturgy, lend significant support to this conclusion.
Incarnation, New Testament, gospels, Revelation, letters, infancy narrative: Paul, reception
Conflicting Criminal Jurisdictions in Early Christianity
June 2020
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Chapter
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Christianity and Criminal Law
The early Christians engaged Jewish and Roman criminal jurisdictions as two distinct instantiations of a legal Other, sometimes set in deliberate contrast, and in addition to emerging internal processes of Christian jurisdiction. Pre-Constantinian Christianity never simply abdicated or ‘outsourced’ criminal justice to Rome. Before long, Christians began to co-opt and critique Roman criminal jurisprudence in the context of persecution, increasingly in a context of public discourse about philosophy and about ethics. There was also an important quietist strain of resistance that deliberately withdrew from such engagement. But by the third century, the patent legal injustice of persecution emboldened legally trained writers like Tertullian and Lactantius publicly to assert Christians’ superior citizenship and Romanitas while castigating Rome’s corruption of its own legal principles and best practice on matters including due process, precedent, and torture-induced confessions. All the while, the potential for a Constantinian settlement was latent in affirmations of the Roman state’s God-given role as the restrainer of evil.
Conflicting criminal jurisdictions in early Christianity
May 2020
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Chapter
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Christianity and Criminal Law
Attitudes to Jewish and Roman power in the Gospel and Acts of Peter
March 2020
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Chapter
Second-century Christianity singled out Peter in order to identify itself with the apostolic gospel tradition in the face of perceived, and intermittently real, hostility from Romans and Jews. The apocryphal Gospel and Acts of Peter exemplify a tendency to seek analogies with the apostolic generation’s protagonists to make sense of present experiences such enmity. These texts do mobilize Peter in the service of a process of legitimation, but this is the legitimation not of institutional power but of a community – a minority experiencing at least perceived harassment and, at certain times and places, acute existential danger. Concern about power exists, too, but for these early writings this consistently privileges the superior power of God and of Jesus over human or demonic agents. Some such texts did in time come to tolerate a different narrative of inevitable Petrine triumph and the acquisition of papal power – though only ex post facto and in light of the Constantinian turn.
SBTMR
Introduction to Austin Farrer: Oxford Warden, Scholar, Preacher
January 2020
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Chapter
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Austin Farrer: Oxford Warden, Scholar, Preacher
SBTMR
Austin Farrer
January 2020
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Book
The New Testament
January 2020
|
Chapter
|
The Oxford Handbook of Christmas
This chapter examines several distinct strands in the New Testament’s reflection on Jesus’ Nativity: From the mystery surrounding his origins in the earliest Gospel, Mark, to the respective infancy narratives of Matthew and Luke, to John’s mystical language of the Word’s origins, and non-narrative conceptions of Jesus’ coming into the world in Paul, other letter-writers, and Revelation. It argues that the slender ancient accounts of ‘Jesus becoming Jesus’ nonetheless offer a rich tapestry of insights on the Incarnation at the heart of Christmas. Brief engagement with the early reception of these texts in theology and apologetics, literary production and art, devotion and liturgy, lend significant support to this conclusion.
The dynamic absence of Jesus in Hebrews
February 2019
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Journal article
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Journal of Theological Studies
How does Hebrews negotiate the whereabouts of the risen Jesus, on the dialectical spectrum between physical and indeed metaphysical absence on the one hand, and affirmations of a continuing or intermittent presence on the other? More than perhaps any other New Testament writing, Hebrews concentrates on Jesus’s distance from the world of earthly Christian life and discipleship. And yet the author’s ‘word of encouragement’ (13:22) evidently serves his recipients’ situation more urgently through its emphasis on the Son’s heavenly high priesthood rather than on his immediate presence. The presence of Jesus is here most clearly articulated in relation to his incarnation in the past: unlike elsewhere in the New Testament, no obvious attempt is made to sublimate or compensate for the absence of Jesus by sacramental, mystical, or pneumatological means. Nevertheless, even the pastness of the incarnation remains a powerful and abiding ingredient both in Christ’s ongoing priestly work and in the expectation of his coming. As a result, Jesus’ seeming remoteness in Hebrews remains in important respects compatible with his continuing accessibility and closeness to pilgrim believers.
Fourfold Gospel Writing
January 2019
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Chapter
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Writing the Gospels
Revelation and Mystery in Ancient Judaism and Pauline Christianity
January 2019
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Journal article
Revelation and Mystery in Ancient Judaism and Pauline Christianity
Book review: Ancient Jewish and Christian Education: Karina Martin Hogan, Matthew Goff & Emma Wasserman (eds), Pedagogy in Ancient Judaism and Early Christianity
May 2018
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Journal article
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Expository Times
Simon Peter: The Transformation of the Apostle
May 2018
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Chapter
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Sources of the Christian Self A Cultural History of Christian Identity
Religion
Scriptural completion in the Infancy Gospel of James
February 2018
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Journal article
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Pro Ecclesia
Every authoritative text—perhaps any significant text—involves its hearers and readers in a process of engagement that invites or even requires the filling of gaps or breaks in what is written.1 In communities committed to canons of Holy Scripture, this engagement may at times appear to outsiders as little more than rationalization—the exposition of a static document in the service of a concern for authorized meaning. Closer observation, however, tends instead to uncover a complex, historically self-renewing process of relating text to intertext; of nuancing the tensions and suspensions of law and poetry and prophecy differentially; of continually rereading multiple senses of the text in light of each other; of the interplay of memory, retrieval, and aggiornamento within an interpreter’s living community of praxis, study, and worship. At the same time, this process sometimes gives rise to a further stage of engagement with authoritative texts, more liminal and yet in other respects more generative than the picture just described. The very genesis of the scriptural texts themselves bears witness to a dynamic process of reception, appreciation, and transmission. In so doing, the sacred page gives rise to new, epiphenomenal text that may either become an integral part of the emerging scriptural voice or alternatively attain an independent authority of its own as a metatext that nevertheless remains associated in some sense with the generative personality of a Moses or an Ezra, a Paul or a John. This process has long been of interest to students of inter-textual and inner-biblical interpretation, of reception history and effective history, in both the Jewish and Christian scriptures.
The gospels on the knowledge of God
January 2018
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Chapter
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A Transforming Vision: Knowing and Loving the Triune God
Pedagogy in Ancient Judaism and Early Christianity
January 2018
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Journal article
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EXPOSITORY TIMES
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
November 2017
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Chapter
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Creation ex nihilo
Creation Ex Nihilo Origins, Development, Contemporary Challenges
November 2017
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Book
This volume concentrates on several key areas: the relationship of the doctrine to its purported biblical sources, how the doctrine emerged in the first several centuries of the Common Era, why the doctrine came under heavy criticism in the ...
The Christian Schism in Jewish History and Jewish MemoryBurnsJoshua Ezra The Christian Schism in Jewish History and Jewish Memory Cambridge University PressCambridge, 2016, x, 293, $ £ €ISBN 978-1-107-12047-1
October 2017
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Journal article
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Journal of Jewish Studies
5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Beyond Bultmann. Reckoning a New Testament theology. Edited by Bruce W. Longenecker and Mikeal C. Parsons. Pp. x + 372 and 1 table. Waco: Baylor University Press, 2014. £33.50 (paper). 978 1 4813 0041 4
April 2017
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Journal article
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The Journal of Ecclesiastical History
Simon Pietro nella scrittura e nella memoria
April 2017
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Book
Religion
The personal presence of Jesus in the writings of Paul
February 2017
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Journal article
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Scottish Journal of Theology
Paul’s view of Jesus as risen and alive raises a basic puzzle of Christian experience. Knowing Jesus to be alive and exalted, does Paul therefore assume him to be present or absent to the believer on earth? <br/>At one level this question is of course so basic that it has impressed itself on all forms of Christian experience and theology ever since antiquity. And in that sense it has evoked a seemingly interminable variety of sometimes highly specified explanations. In the contemporary West, for example, Christians of a traditional Catholic mindset might reply that Jesus is present most concretely in the Eucharist; Lutherans, in Word and Sacrament; many other Protestants, in the reading or proclamation of Scripture; charismatics, in the experience of the Spirit; and so forth. Within this range of Christian expression, some may appeal to a sense of Jesus’ presence in experiences of the heart, Ignatian imagination, visionary experience of Jesus or Mary, or in their response to imperatives of charity, community-building or social justice. <br/>What does seem clear from all this is that the temporarily absent Jesus is sublimated to popular Christian experience in remarkably varying ways, which may themselves be a function of theological, cultural and indeed temperamental or psychological diversity.
The personal presence of Jesus in the writings of Paul
February 2017
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Journal article
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Scottish Journal of Theology
For Paul, where is Jesus now? The Apostle's Christ-mysticism provides one important clue to his sense of continued personal presence, but this coexists with an important eschatological dialectic that involves absence as much as presence. Moreoever, straightforward sublimation in terms of the Holy Spirit in no way exhausts the register of Jesus' personal presence for Paul, which also finds specific application in repeated visionary experiences, as well as in the church gathered for worship, baptism, and eucharist. The dialectic of absence and presence appears on the one hand personally attuned in the assurance of Paul's Jesus that 'My grace is sufficient for you' (2 Cor 12:7), but it is also eschatologically and spatially articulated in the promise that 'the Lord is near' (Phil 4:5).
John Barclay, Paul and the Gift BarclayJohn, Paul and the Gift (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2015); xvi + 656 pp.: 9780802868893, $70.00 (hbk)
September 2016
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Journal article
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Theology
The perils of Paulines
August 2016
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Journal article
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TLS - The Times Literary Supplement
Short Stories by Jesus: The Enigmatic Parables of a Controversial Rabbi. Four Perspectives – I. Short Stories by Jesus: The Enigmatic Parables of a Controversial Rabbi. By Amy-Jill Levine. New York: HarperOne, 2014. 320 pages. $25.99 (hardcover).
June 2016
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Journal article
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Horizons
Jews and Christians in the First and Second Centuries: How to Write Their HistoryTomsonPeter J.SchwartzJoshua Jews and Christians in the First and Second Centuries: How to Write Their History Compendia Rerum Iudaicarum ad ...
April 2016
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Journal article
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Journal of Jewish Studies
5004 Religious Studies, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Scripture’s Pope meets von Balthasar’s Peter
December 2015
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Chapter
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Peter in Early Christianity
Bockmuehl, Prof. Markus Nikolaus Andreas, (born 29 Dec. 1961), Dean Ireland’s Professor of the Exegesis of Holy Scripture, University of Oxford, since 2014; Fellow, Keble College, Oxford, since 2007
December 2015
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Journal article
The Gospel of Thomas: Introduction and Commentary. By S imon G athercole .
October 2015
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Journal article
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The Journal of Theological Studies
43 History, Heritage and Archaeology, 4303 Historical Studies, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology
The Gospels on the Presence of Jesus
September 2015
|
Chapter
|
The Oxford Handbook of Christology
The idea of creation out of nothing: From qumran to Genesis Rabbah
March 2015
|
Chapter
|
Visualizing Jews Through the Ages Literary and Material Representations of Jewishness and Judaism
The unknown Christmas gospel
January 2015
|
Internet publication
The New Testament grants only glimpses of Jesus’ origins, his family background, birth and infancy. The Infancy Gospel of James presupposes and speaks alongside the New Testament gospels, and in no way seeks to replace them. We owe this text much that has become integral to the world’s imagination of Christmas.
History of Christmas, Infancy Gospel of James
Gospel Writing: A Canonical Perspective. By Francis Watson.
April 2014
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Journal article
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The Journal of Theological Studies
43 History, Heritage and Archaeology, 4303 Historical Studies, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology
Wright's Paul and the Cloud of (Other) Witnesses
April 2014
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Journal article
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Journal for the Study of Paul and His Letters
5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Wright’s Paul and the cloud of (other) witnesses
April 2014
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Journal article
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Journal for the Study of Paul and His Letters
With appreciation for Wright's admirable achievement, this article takes its starting point from a "word cloud" of Paul and the Faithfulness of God in order to illustrate this work's emphases as well as possible lacunae. Relative silence envelops questions such as (1) Paul's biography and its theological or mimetic value, including Luke's Paul in Acts; (2) criticisms of Wright's customarily straightforward equation of Paul's preferred term Christ with Messiah; (3) the hermeneutical implications for this project of any "deutero-Pauline" or indeed strictly "pseudonymous" authorship; (4) the place of observant Jews in "all Israel." Wright's is a Paul of soteriological logos rather than of "Christomimetic" ethos, of suffering or of sacrifice. But these are queries for constructive engagement with what is now the most complete account of its kind in existence.
Simón Pedro: en la escritura y en la memoria
January 2014
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Book
Markus Bockmuehl introduces the New Testament Peter by asking how first and second-century sources may be understood through the prism of 'living memory' among the disciples of the apostolic generation and the students of those disciples.
Religion
Markus Bockmuehl, The Remembered Peter in Ancient Reception and Modern Debate (Tubingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2010, Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament 262) xiv + 263 pp. €79.00. ISBN 978-3-16-150580-5 (hbk).
January 2013
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Journal article
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Ecclesiology
5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Studies in Matthew and Early Christianity
January 2013
|
Book
Studien zu Matthäus und dem frühen Christentum.
Simon Peter in Scripture and Memory
November 2012
|
Book
"Probing intelligence, originality without eccentricity, flawless scholarship, felicitous style--all of Bockmuehl's much admired gifts are generously displayed in this volume.
Creatio ex nihilo in Palestinian Judaism and Early Christianity
Christ as creator. Origins of a New Testament doctrine. By Sean M. McDonough. Pp. xi+294. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009. £65. 978 0 19 957647 0
October 2011
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Journal article
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The Journal of Ecclesiastical History
5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
The Trouble with the Inclusive Jesus
June 2011
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Journal article
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Horizons in Biblical Theology
In the long-standing debate between universalist and particularist interpretations of Jesus, recent years have witnessed the relentless rise of the idea that his was a socially radical and subversive gospel ahead of its time, fully in keeping with contemporary cultural agendas of “inclusion” or “inclusiveness”. The present study attempts to contextualize this “inclusive Jesus” within New Testament studies by means of three angles of approach: (1) recent work on the “inclusive”ethics of Jesus, (2) Jacob Neusner’s critique of New Testament scholarship on Jewish particularism and Christian universalism, and (3) the reception in current debate of Joachim Jeremias’ interpretation of Jesus’ view of Gentiles. In view of the overwhelming evidence that Jesus was “inclusive” as well as “exclusive” in both theology and praxis, Concluding Observations stress the location of this problem within a wider understanding of the biblical view of Election, and identify the Israelite particularity of Jesus as essential to his mission on behalf of Israel as well as the nations.
Grace, Works and Destiny: Salvation in Qumran’s Community Rule (1QS/4QS)
January 2011
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Chapter
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This World and the World to Come: Soteriology in Early Judaism
The Son of David and His Mother
January 2011
|
Journal article
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Journal of Theological Studies
The Remembered Peter in Ancient Reception and Modern Debate
November 2010
|
Book
Markus Bockmuehl studies Simon Peter's highly diverse profile and reception in second-century Rome and Syria, where certain communities and individuals ...
Religion
Paradise in antiquity
July 2010
|
Book
Dealing with a wide variety of texts, these essays explore major themes such as the allegorical and literal interpretations of Paradise, the tension between ...
Religion
Locating paradise
June 2010
|
Chapter
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Paradise in Antiquity
37 Earth Sciences, 5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Paradise in Antiquity
June 2010
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Book
The social and intellectual vitality of Judaism and Christianity in antiquity was in large part a function of their ability to articulate a viably transcendent hope for the human condition. Narratives of Paradise - based on the concrete symbol of the Garden of Delights - came to play a central role for Jews, Christians, and eventually Muslims too. The essays in this volume highlight the multiple hermeneutical perspectives on biblical Paradise from Second Temple Judaism and Christian origins to the systematic expositions of Augustine and rabbinic literature. They show that while early Christian and Jewish sources draw on texts from the same Bible, their perceptions of Paradise often reflect the highly different structures of the two sister religions. Dealing with a wide variety of texts, these essays explore major themes such as the allegorical and literal interpretations of Paradise, the tension between heaven and earth, and Paradise's physical location in space and time.
Book Review: The Church's Guide for Reading Paul: The canonical shaping of the Pauline corpus, Brevard S. Childs (Eerdmans 2008), 288 pp, £18.99 pbk; Unlocking Romans: Resurrection and the Justification of God, J. R. Dan...
March 2010
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Journal article
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Theology
5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
No ordinary angel. Celestial spirits and Christian claims about Jesus
January 2010
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Journal article
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JOURNAL OF ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY
The Church's Guide for Reading Paul: The canonical shaping of the Pauline corpus
January 2010
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Journal article
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THEOLOGY
The macbride sermon, hertford college, oxford 25/01/2009: Messianic prophecy and abrahamic faith
January 2010
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Journal article
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Expository Times
The Remembered Peter
January 2010
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Book
Der erinnerte Petrus in der antiken Rezeption und der neueren Forschung.
Unlocking Romans: Resurrection and the justification of God
January 2010
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Journal article
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THEOLOGY
Book Review: Imitating Jesus: An Inclusive Approach to New Testament Ethics
September 2009
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Journal article
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Theology
5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Introduction
January 2009
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Journal article
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Redemption and Resistance: The Messianic Hopes of Jews and Christians in Antiquity
Redemption and Resistance: The Messianic Hopes of Jews and Christians in Antiquity
January 2009
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Book
Redemption and Resistance brings together an eminent cast of contributors to provide a state-of-the-art discussion of Messianism as a topic of political and religious commitment and controversy. By surveying this motif over nearly a thousand years with the help of a focused historical and political searchlight, this volume is sure to break fresh ground. It will serve as an attractive contribution to the history of ancient Judaism and Christianity, of the complex and often problematic relationship between them, and of the conflicting loyalties their hopes for redemption created vis-à-vis a public order that was at first pagan and later Christian. Although each chapter is designed to stand on its own as an introduction to the topic at hand, the overall argument unfolds a coherent history. The first two parts, on pre-Christian Jewish and primitive Christian Messianism, set the stage by identifying two entities that in Part III are then addressed in the development of their explicit relationship in a Graeco-Roman world marked by violent persecution of Jewish and Christian hopes and loyalties. The story is then explored beyond the Constantinian turn and its abortive reversal under Julian, to the Christian Empire up to the rise of Islam.
Resistance and Redemption in the Jesus Tradition
January 2009
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Chapter
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Redemption and Resistance: The Messianic Hopes of Jews and Christians in Antiquity
The Dead Sea Scrolls and Ancient Commentary
January 2009
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Chapter
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Text, Thought, and Practice in Qumran and Early Christianity
The 13 papers comprising this volume represent the fruits of the first Orion Center Symposium devoted to the comparison of the Dead Sea and early Christian texts.
Religion
The Dead Sea Scrolls And The Origins Of Biblical Commentary
January 2009
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Chapter
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Text, Thought, and Practice in Qumran and Early Christianity
The Dead Sea Scrolls And The Origins Of Biblical Commentary
January 2009
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Journal article
Scripture's Doctrine and Theology's Bible How the New Testament Shapes Christian Dogmatics
November 2008
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Book
Here is engaging dialogue for scholars in both biblical studies and theology as well as their students.ContributorsMarkus BockmuehlJames Carleton PagetR.
Religion
Ruminative Overlay: Matthew's Hauerwas
February 2008
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Journal article
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Pro Ecclesia A Journal of Catholic and Evangelical Theology
5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Making Wise the Simple: The Torah in Christian Faith and Practice (review)
December 2007
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Journal article
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Shofar An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies
5004 Religious Studies, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Peter's death in Rome? Back to front and upside down
Scripture On the Moral Life of Creatures: In Conversation With Hans G. Ulrich
August 2007
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Journal article
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Studies in Christian Ethics
5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
INTRODUCTION
January 2007
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Journal article
|
Redemption and Resistance: The Messianic Hopes of Jews and Christians in Antiquity
Redemption and Resistance: The Messianic Hopes of Jews and Christians in Antiquity
January 2007
|
Book
Redemption and Resistance brings together an eminent cast of contributors to provide a state-of-the-art discussion of Messianism as a topic of political and religious commitment and controversy. By surveying this motif over nearly a thousand years with the help of a focused historical and political searchlight, this volume is sure to break fresh ground. It will serve as an attractive contribution to the history of ancient Judaism and Christianity, of the complex and often problematic relationship between them, and of the conflicting loyalties their hopes for redemption created vis-à-vis a public order that was at first pagan and later Christian. Although each chapter is designed to stand on its own as an introduction to the topic at hand, the overall argument unfolds a coherent history. The first two parts, on pre-Christian Jewish and primitive Christian Messianism, set the stage by identifying two entities that in Part III are then addressed in the development of their explicit relationship in a Graeco-Roman world marked by violent persecution of Jewish and Christian hopes and loyalties. The story is then explored beyond the Constantinian turn and its abortive reversal under Julian, to the Christian Empire up to the rise of Islam.
RESISTANCE AND REDEMPTION IN THE JESUS TRADITION
January 2007
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Chapter
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Redemption and Resistance: The Messianic Hopes of Jews and Christians in Antiquity
Seeing the Word Refocusing New Testament Study
September 2006
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Book
This important study considers the divided and contentious state of contemporary New Testament studies, arguing that the interpretation of Scripture must take place within the context of the church and Christian theology.
Religion
Exhibitions of the oracles of the lord: The fragments.
January 2006
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Journal article
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JOURNAL OF ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY
Why not Let Acts Be Acts? In Conversation with C. Kavin Rowe
December 2005
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Journal article
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Journal for the Study of the New Testament
5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Appendix: Graham Stanton's publications
July 2005
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Chapter
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The Written Gospel
5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Bibliography
July 2005
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Chapter
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The Written Gospel
5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Introduction
July 2005
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Chapter
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The Written Gospel
Introduction
July 2005
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Chapter
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The Written Gospel
5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
The making of gospel commentaries
July 2005
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Chapter
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The Written Gospel
The making of gospel commentaries
July 2005
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Chapter
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The Written Gospel
4705 Literary Studies, 43 History, Heritage and Archaeology, 47 Language, Communication and Culture, 4303 Historical Studies, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 5005 Theology
The Written Gospel
July 2005
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Book
This book comprehensively surveys the origin, production and reception of the canonical gospels in the early church. The discussion unfolds in three steps. Part One traces the origin of the 'gospel' of Jesus, its significance in Jewish and Hellenistic contexts of the first century, and its development from eyewitness memory to oral tradition and written text. Part Two then more specifically examines the composition, design and intentions of each of the four canonical gospels. Widening the focus, Part Three first asks about gospel-writing as viewed from the perspective of ancient Jews and pagans before turning to the question of reception history in the proliferation of 'apocryphal' gospels, in the formation of the canon, and in the beginnings of a gospel commentary tradition.
Christianity in the making, vol 1, Jesus remembered.
January 2005
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Journal article
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JOURNAL OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES
Cosmic christology in Paul and the Pauline school.
January 2005
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Journal article
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BIBLICA
Jesus, a Jewish Galilean: A new reading of the Jesus story.
January 2005
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Journal article
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JOURNAL OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES
Simon Peter and Bethsaida
January 2005
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Chapter
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The Missions of James, Peter, and Paul
The making of gospel commentaries
January 2005
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Chapter
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WRITTEN GOSPEL
THE WRITTEN GOSPEL Introduction
January 2005
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Chapter
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WRITTEN GOSPEL
This Jesus
October 2004
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Book
This concise but very thought-provoking work on the historical Jesus by Markus Bockmuehl posits that the historical man of Jesus cannot be separated from the Christ of faith.
Religion
Compleat History of the Resurrection: A Dialogue with N.T. Wright
June 2004
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Journal article
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Journal for the Study of the New Testament
5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Simon Peter's names in Jewish sources
January 2004
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Journal article
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JOURNAL OF JEWISH STUDIES
Simon Peter's names in Jewish sources
January 2004
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Journal article
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Journal of Jewish Studies
What's Under the Microscope?
January 2004
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Journal article
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Theology
5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
‘Leave the Dead to Bury their own Dead’: A Brief Clarification in Reply to Crispin H.T. Fletcher-Louis
December 2003
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Journal article
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Journal for the Study of the New Testament
5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Studies in exegesis: Christian critiques of Jewish law and rabbinic responses, 70-300CE
January 2003
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Journal article
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JOURNAL OF JEWISH STUDIES
Syrian memories of Peter: Ignatius, Justin and Serapion
January 2003
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Chapter
Who was Jesus? A Jewish-Christian dialogue
January 2003
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Journal article
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JOURNAL OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES
Book Reviews : Paul and the Stoics, by Troels Engberg-Pedersen. Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 2000. xi + 435 pp. pb. £19.95. ISBN 0-567-08712-3
April 2002
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Journal article
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Studies in Christian Ethics
5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 5001 Applied Ethics
Philippi, Vol 2: Catalogue of manuscripts on the colony of Philippi
January 2002
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Journal article
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JOURNAL OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES
Bibliography
November 2001
|
Chapter
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The Cambridge Companion to Jesus
Introduction
November 2001
|
Chapter
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The Cambridge Companion to Jesus
Resurrection
November 2001
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Chapter
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The Cambridge Companion to Jesus
The Cambridge Companion to Jesus
November 2001
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Book
Book Review: Resurrection
July 2001
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Journal article
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Theology
5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
David in the 'Fourth Gospel': The Johannine version of the 'Psalms'
January 2001
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Journal article
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JOURNAL OF JEWISH STUDIES
Paul: The man and the myth
January 2001
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Journal article
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JOURNAL OF JEWISH STUDIES
Peter in the Gospels
January 2001
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Journal article
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EXPOSITORY TIMES
Peter: Apostle for the whole church
January 2001
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Journal article
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EXPOSITORY TIMES
Religion in the Dead Sea Scrolls
January 2001
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Journal article
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JOURNAL OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES
Jewish Law in Gentile Churches Halakhah and the Beginning of Christian Public Ethics
November 2000
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Book
If there were any binding norms, what made them so, and on what basis were they articulated?In this important study, Markus Bockmuehl approaches such questions by examining the halakhic (Jewish legal) rationale behind the ethics of Jesus, ...
Religion
Book Review: A Theory of Primitive Christian Religion
May 2000
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Journal article
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Theology
5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Jesus in the Drama of Salvation
March 2000
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Journal article
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Theology
5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Jesus of Nazareth, millenarian prophet
January 2000
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Journal article
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JOURNAL OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES
The Law in the Old- and New-Testament
January 2000
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Journal article
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JOURNAL OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES
Virtue amidst Vice: The Catalog of Virtues in 2 Peter, by J. Daryl Charles. Sheffield Academic Press, 1997. 194 pp. hb. £35. ISBN 1-85075-686-4
August 1999
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Journal article
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Studies in Christian Ethics
5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 5001 Applied Ethics
Die Reinheit des ‘christlichen Gottesvolkes’ aus Juden und Heiden. By Jürgen Wehnert. Pp. 311. (Forschungen zur Religion und Literatur des Alten und Neuen Testaments, 173.) Göottingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1997. ISBN 3 525 53856 1. DM 124.
April 1999
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Journal article
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The Journal of Theological Studies
43 History, Heritage and Archaeology, 4303 Historical Studies, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology
Antioch and James the Just
January 1999
|
Chapter
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James the Just and Christian Origins
Jesus' attitude towards the law: A study of the Gospels
January 1999
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Journal article
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JOURNAL OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES
REVIEWS
October 1998
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Journal article
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The Journal of Theological Studies
43 History, Heritage and Archaeology, 4303 Historical Studies, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology
‘LET THE DEAD BURY THEIR DEAD’ (MATT. 8:22/LUKE 9:60): JESUS AND THE HALAKHAH1
October 1998
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Journal article
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The Journal of Theological Studies
43 History, Heritage and Archaeology, 4303 Historical Studies, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology
Humpty Dumpty and New Testament Theology
September 1998
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Journal article
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Theology
5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
‘To Be Or Not To Be’: The Possible Futures of New Testament Scholarship Markus Bockmueh
August 1998
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Journal article
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Scottish Journal of Theology
5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Jewish and Christian public ethics in the early Roman Empire
May 1998
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Chapter
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Tolerance and Intolerance in Early Judaism and Christianity
5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
ARMIN LANGE, Weisheit und Prädestination: Weisheitliche Urordnung und Prädestination in den Textfunden von Qumran. Studies on the Texts of the Desert of Judah 18. xii + 347 + 3 (plates) pp. E.J. Brill, Leiden, New York a...
January 1998
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Journal article
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Vetus Testamentum
47 Language, Communication and Culture, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 43 History, Heritage and Archaeology
New Testament Ethics Review Article
December 1997
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Journal article
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The Expository Times
5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
REVIEWS
October 1997
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Journal article
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The Journal of Theological Studies
43 History, Heritage and Archaeology, 4303 Historical Studies, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology
A vision for the church studies in early Christian ecclesiology in honour of J.P.M. Sweet
September 1997
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Book
Perhaps more importantly, what is it meant to be? How did its earliest members understand this body of which they had become a part?This is a textbook collection of fifteen essays by an international group of New Testament experts.
Religion
REVIEWS
April 1997
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Journal article
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The Journal of Theological Studies
43 History, Heritage and Archaeology, 4303 Historical Studies, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology
“THE FORM OF GOD” (PHIL. 2:6) VARIATIONS ON A THEME OF JEWISH MYSTICISM
April 1997
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Journal article
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The Journal of Theological Studies
43 History, Heritage and Archaeology, 4303 Historical Studies, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology
D.D. SWANSON, The Temple Scroll and the Bible: The Methodology of 11QT. Studies on the Texts of the Desert of Judah 14. xii + 268 pp. E.J. Brill. Leiden, New York and Köln, 1995. NLG 131.50, $85.
January 1997
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Journal article
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Vetus Testamentum
5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
The Epistle to the Philippians
January 1997
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Book
The apostle Paul’s letter to the Christian community at Philippi, his first congregation on European soil, contains some of his most evocative and powerful images. Yet it was written under prison conditions. Dealing with both external and Church conflicts with determined cheerfulness, the letter examines issues that remain contemporary. Paul thereby illuminates both the Christian ethic and the underlying story of divine grace and the wonder of incarnation.
5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Book Reviews : A Different Jewish Jesus
July 1996
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Journal article
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The Expository Times
5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Halakhah and ethics in the Jesus tradition
June 1996
|
Chapter
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Early Christian Thought in its Jewish Context
5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
A Commentator's Approach To the 'Effective History' of Philippians
April 1996
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Journal article
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Journal for the Study of the New Testament
5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
REVIEWS
April 1996
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Journal article
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The Journal of Theological Studies
43 History, Heritage and Archaeology, 4303 Historical Studies, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology
BILHAH NITZAN, Qumran Prayer and Religious Poetry. Studies on the Texts of the Desert of Judah 12. xxii + 417 pp. E.J. Brill, Leiden, etc., 1994. 165 guilders.
January 1996
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Journal article
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Vetus Testamentum
5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Book Reviews
October 1995
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Journal article
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The Expository Times
5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Book Review : Biblical Interpretation and Christian Ethics, by J. I. H. McDonald. Cambridge University Press, 1993. xiv + 305pp. hb. £37.50
August 1995
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Journal article
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Studies in Christian Ethics
5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Book Review: A Century of New Testament Study
May 1995
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Journal article
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Theology
5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
ANETTE STEUDEL, Der Midrasch zur Esahatologie aus der Qumrangemeinde (4QmidrEschata.b). Studies on the Texts of the Desert of Judah 13. xii + 240 pp. including an appendix of four photographic plates (two loose-leaf in a s...
January 1995
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Journal article
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Vetus Testamentum
47 Language, Communication and Culture, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 43 History, Heritage and Archaeology
M.J. STEUSSY, Gardens in Babylon: Narrative and Faith in the Greek Legends of Daniel. SBL Dissertation Series 141. xiv + 226 pp. Scholars Press, Atlanta, 1993. $29.95, for members $19.95; paperback $19.95, $14.95.
January 1995
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Journal article
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Vetus Testamentum
47 Language, Communication and Culture, 4705 Literary Studies
Natural Law in Second Temple Judaism
January 1995
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Journal article
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Vetus Testamentum
47 Language, Communication and Culture, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 43 History, Heritage and Archaeology
REVIEWS
January 1995
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Journal article
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The Journal of Theological Studies
43 History, Heritage and Archaeology, 4303 Historical Studies, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology
TALKING POINTS FROM BOOKS + AN INTERVIEW WITH BOCKMUEHL,MARKUS
January 1995
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Journal article
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EXPOSITORY TIMES
THE ATONEMENT - WINTER,M
January 1995
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Journal article
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EXPOSITORY TIMES
THE NOACHIDE-COMMANDMENTS AND NEW-TESTAMENT ETHICS + RABBINIC REFLECTIONS ON THE MORAL OBLIGATIONS OF GENTILES - WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO ACTS-XV AND PAULINE HALAKHAH
January 1995
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Journal article
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REVUE BIBLIQUE
WHO ARE THE PEOPLE OF GOD - EARLY-CHRISTIAN MODELS OF COMMUNITY - KEE,HC
January 1995
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Journal article
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EXPOSITORY TIMES
An Introduction to New Testament Textual Criticism by Léon Vaganay 2nd ed. revised and updated by Christian-Bernard Amphoux (Translated by Jenny Heimerdinger. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991. xxiv + 227 pp. £...
October 1994
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Journal article
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Evangelical Quarterly An International Review of Bible and Theology
5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Die Essener-Bericht des Flavius Josephus: Quellenstudien zu den Essenertexten im Werk des Judischen Historiographen
July 1994
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Journal article
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Vetus Testamentum
47 Language, Communication and Culture, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 43 History, Heritage and Archaeology
The Partings of the Ways Between Christianity and Judaism and their Significance for the Character of Christianity. By James D. G. Dunn. London, SCM and Philadelphia, Trinity Press International, 1991. Pp. xvi + 368 (indexed). £17.50.
November 1993
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Journal article
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Scottish Journal of Theology
5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
Revelation and Mystery in Ancient Judaism and Pauline Christianity
July 1993
|
Book
PAUL THE CONVERT - THE APOSTOLATE AND APOSTASY OF SAUL THE PHARISEE - SEGAL,AF
January 1992
|
Journal article
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JOURNAL OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES
Revelation and Mystery in Ancient Judaism and Pauline Christianity
January 1992
|
Book
5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
REVIEWS
January 1992
|
Journal article
|
The Journal of Theological Studies
43 History, Heritage and Archaeology, 4303 Historical Studies, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology
Paul and the Jewish Law. Halakha in the Letters of the Apostle to the Gentiles. By Peter J. Tomson. Pp. xix+327. (Compendia Rerum Iudaicarum ad Novum Testamentum, 3/1.) Assen: Van Gorcum/Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1990. Gld.79.50.
October 1991
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Journal article
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The Journal of Theological Studies
43 History, Heritage and Archaeology, 4303 Historical Studies, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology
REVIEWS
January 1991
|
Journal article
|
The Journal of Theological Studies
43 History, Heritage and Archaeology, 4303 Historical Studies, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology
Matthew 5.32; 19.9 In the Light of Pre-rabbinic Halakhah
April 1989
|
Journal article
|
New Testament Studies
43 History, Heritage and Archaeology, 4303 Historical Studies, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology
A NOTE ON THE TEXT OF COLOSSIANS 4:3
January 1988
|
Journal article
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The Journal of Theological Studies
43 History, Heritage and Archaeology, 4303 Historical Studies, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology
THE GREEK VERB PHANEROO IN THE NEW-TESTAMENT - A NEW EVALUATION
January 1988
|
Journal article
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BIBLISCHE ZEITSCHRIFT
1 Thessalonians 2:14-16 and the Church in Jerusalem
Journal article
|
Tyndale Bulletin
5004 Religious Studies, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies
A ‘Slain Messiah’ in 4Q Serekh Milḥamah (4Q285)?
Journal article
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Tyndale Bulletin
4703 Language Studies, 47 Language, Communication and Culture, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 5004 Religious Studies, 5005 Theology
Aquinas on Abraham’s Faith in Romans 4
Chapter
|
Reading Romans with St. Thomas Aquinas
Conflicting Criminal Jurisdictions in the New Testament and the Early Church
Chapter
|
Christianity and Criminal Law: An Introduction
Dodd, Charles Harold
Dataset
Introduction
Chapter
|
Holman Hunt and the Light of the World in Oxford
5005 Theology, 3601 Art History, Theory and Criticism, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies, 36 Creative Arts and Writing