The Scriptures of Israel in Jewish and Christian Tradition
Essays in Honour of Maarten J. J. Menken
Edited by Bart J. Koet, University of Tilburg, Steve Moyise, University of Chichester and Joseph Verheyden, Catholic University of Leuven
Biographical note
Bart Koet Ph.D. (1989), is Professor of Early Christian Literature at the University of Tilburg. He recently edited Dreams as Divine communication in Christianity: From Hermas to Aquinas (Leuven, 2012).
Joseph Verheyden, Dr. Theol. (1987), is Professor of New Testament Studies at the Catholic University of Leuven. He has recently co-edited (with J. Krans) Patristic and Text-Critical Studies: The Collected Essays of William L. Petersen (Leiden, 2012).
Steve Moyise, Ph.D. (1994) is Professor of New Testament at the University of Chichester. His most recent books are Jesus and Scripture (Grand Rapids, 2010); Paul and Scripture (Grand Rapids, 2010); and The Later New Testament Writers and Scripture (London, 2012).
Joseph Verheyden, Dr. Theol. (1987), is Professor of New Testament Studies at the Catholic University of Leuven. He has recently co-edited (with J. Krans) Patristic and Text-Critical Studies: The Collected Essays of William L. Petersen (Leiden, 2012).
Steve Moyise, Ph.D. (1994) is Professor of New Testament at the University of Chichester. His most recent books are Jesus and Scripture (Grand Rapids, 2010); Paul and Scripture (Grand Rapids, 2010); and The Later New Testament Writers and Scripture (London, 2012).
Readership
Scholars and postgraduate students interested in Jewish and Christian hermeneutics, the transmission of ancient texts, the development of tradion and New Testament theology.
Table of contents
Bart J. Koet, Maarten Menken: A Portrait of the Scholar
Interpretation of Scripture and the New Testament
Steve Moyise, Matthew’s Bible in the Infancy Narrative
Joost Smit Sibinga †, Theme and Variations: Isaiah’s Song of the Vineyard and Its Influence in the New Testament
Joop Smit, The Function of the Two Quotations from Isaiah in Luke 3-4
Adelbert Denaux, The Use of Scripture in Luke 9:51-56
Susan Docherty, The Reception of Tobit in the New Testament and Early Christian Literature, with Special Reference to Luke-Acts
Peter Doble, “Are these things so?” (Acts 7:1): A Narrative-intertextual Approach to Reading Stephen’s speech
Joseph Verheyden, A Cry for Help: A Note in the Margin of Acts 16:9
Wendy North, Bethany beyond the Jordan
Ulrich Busse, Reinigung und Heiligung im Johannesevangelium
Gilbert Van Belle, The Signs of the Messiah in the Fourth Gospel: The Problem of a “Wonder-working Messiah”
Harm W. Hollander, Paul's Use of the Old Testament and his Attack on Apollos' Adherents in Corinth
Gert Steyn, The Text Form of the Torah quotations Common to the Corpus Philonicum and Paul’s Corinthian Correspondence
Martin C. de Boer, Observations on the Significance of the Old Testament in Galatians
Tobias Nicklas, Intertextuality – Christology – Pseudepigraphy: The Impact of Old Testament Allusions in 2 Thess 1:5-12
David Allen, Why Bother Going Outside?: The Use of the Old Testament in Heb 13:10-16
John Court, Tracing Scriptural Authority
Michael Labahn, “Das Buch dieser Prophetie” – die Schriften Israels und die Schrift des Sehers: Überlegungen zu Schrifthermeneutik der Johannesoffenbarung
Archibald van Wieringen, The Theologoumenon “New” Bridging the Old and the New Testament
Eric Ottenheijm, “Which if a man do them he shall live by them:” Jewish and Christian Discourse on Lev 18:5
Margaret Daly-Denton, The Old Testament in the New: A Resource for an Ecological Reading
Interpretation of Scripture after the NT
Huub W.M. van de Sandt, The Old Testament and the Didache
Bart J. Koet, Isaiah 60:17 as a Key for Understanding the Two-fold Ministry of ἐπισκόποι and διάκονοι According to 1 Clement (1 Clem. 42:5)
Pieter W. van der Horst, Biblical Quotations in Judaeo-Greek Inscriptions
Henk Jan de Jonge, The Use of the Old Testament in Scripture Readings in Early Christian Assemblies
Pancratius C. Beentjes, Saint Augustine’s Sermons 38-41 on the Book of Ben Sira
Lionel North, Jan van den Driessche (Johannes Drusius, 1550-1616) and the Study of the Old Testament in the New
Bibliography Prof. Dr Maarten Menken
Interpretation of Scripture and the New Testament
Steve Moyise, Matthew’s Bible in the Infancy Narrative
Joost Smit Sibinga †, Theme and Variations: Isaiah’s Song of the Vineyard and Its Influence in the New Testament
Joop Smit, The Function of the Two Quotations from Isaiah in Luke 3-4
Adelbert Denaux, The Use of Scripture in Luke 9:51-56
Susan Docherty, The Reception of Tobit in the New Testament and Early Christian Literature, with Special Reference to Luke-Acts
Peter Doble, “Are these things so?” (Acts 7:1): A Narrative-intertextual Approach to Reading Stephen’s speech
Joseph Verheyden, A Cry for Help: A Note in the Margin of Acts 16:9
Wendy North, Bethany beyond the Jordan
Ulrich Busse, Reinigung und Heiligung im Johannesevangelium
Gilbert Van Belle, The Signs of the Messiah in the Fourth Gospel: The Problem of a “Wonder-working Messiah”
Harm W. Hollander, Paul's Use of the Old Testament and his Attack on Apollos' Adherents in Corinth
Gert Steyn, The Text Form of the Torah quotations Common to the Corpus Philonicum and Paul’s Corinthian Correspondence
Martin C. de Boer, Observations on the Significance of the Old Testament in Galatians
Tobias Nicklas, Intertextuality – Christology – Pseudepigraphy: The Impact of Old Testament Allusions in 2 Thess 1:5-12
David Allen, Why Bother Going Outside?: The Use of the Old Testament in Heb 13:10-16
John Court, Tracing Scriptural Authority
Michael Labahn, “Das Buch dieser Prophetie” – die Schriften Israels und die Schrift des Sehers: Überlegungen zu Schrifthermeneutik der Johannesoffenbarung
Archibald van Wieringen, The Theologoumenon “New” Bridging the Old and the New Testament
Eric Ottenheijm, “Which if a man do them he shall live by them:” Jewish and Christian Discourse on Lev 18:5
Margaret Daly-Denton, The Old Testament in the New: A Resource for an Ecological Reading
Interpretation of Scripture after the NT
Huub W.M. van de Sandt, The Old Testament and the Didache
Bart J. Koet, Isaiah 60:17 as a Key for Understanding the Two-fold Ministry of ἐπισκόποι and διάκονοι According to 1 Clement (1 Clem. 42:5)
Pieter W. van der Horst, Biblical Quotations in Judaeo-Greek Inscriptions
Henk Jan de Jonge, The Use of the Old Testament in Scripture Readings in Early Christian Assemblies
Pancratius C. Beentjes, Saint Augustine’s Sermons 38-41 on the Book of Ben Sira
Lionel North, Jan van den Driessche (Johannes Drusius, 1550-1616) and the Study of the Old Testament in the New
Bibliography Prof. Dr Maarten Menken
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Annette Bourland Huizenga, University of Dubuque
In Moral Education for Women in the Pastoral and Pythagorean Letters: Philosophers of the Household, Annette Bourland Huizenga examines the Greco-Roman moral-philosophical “curriculum” for women by comparing these two pseudepigraphic epistolary collections.
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Luke Timothy Johnson, Candler School of Theology, Emory University
In Contested Issues in Christian Origins and the New Testament, Luke Timothy Johnson offers a series of independent studies on a range of critical questions from the historical Jesus to sexuality and law.
€176.00$245.00
Travis B. Williams, Tusculum College
In Persecution in 1 Peter, Travis B. Williams offers a comprehensive and detailed socio-historical investigation into the nature of persecution in 1 Peter, situating the epistle against the backdrop of conflict management in first-century CE Asia Minor.
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Wm. Randolph Bynum, Northwest Nazarene University
In The Fourth Gospel and the Scriptures, Bynum presents new insights from ancient biblical manuscripts 4QXII and the Minor Prophets Scroll that help unlock the mystery of John’s unique form of scriptural citation.
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Edited by David E. Aune, University of Notre Dame and Frederick E. Brenk, Pontifical Biblical Institute, Rome.
Focusing on a strength of the faculty of the Pontifical Biblical Institute, this volume is a collection of nine essays by an international group of scholars who have used texts from the Greco-Roman world to illuminate various aspects of the New Testament.
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Edited by Christian-B. Amphoux & J. Keith Elliott with Bernard Outtier
Fifteen essays discuss aspects of the textual history of the Greek, Coptic, Georgian and Armenian Psalter and Gospels.
La comparaison des versions anciennes de la Bible, ici des Psaumes et des évangiles, met en évidence la richesse et la variété de la tradition manuscrite. Voici un éventail de ...
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David M. Moffitt
Hebrews appears to have little interest in Jesus’ resurrection. Drawing on contemporary studies of Jewish sacrifice, Jewish apocalyptic literature, and fresh exegetical insights, this volume argues that Jesus’ resurrection forms the conceptual center of Hebrews’ Christological and soteriological ...
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Charles H. Talbert
Using four models from Jewish and Greco-Roman traditions, this book offers a synthetic view of how early Christian Christologies developed during the churches' first 100 years.
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Susan J. Wendel
Although scholars often assume that Luke and Justin similarly claim the sacred texts of Jews for the non-Jewish church, this book offers a fresh analysis that uncovers significant differences between their respective depictions of the relationship between Christ-believers and the Jewish scriptures.
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Karl Olav Sandnes
This study investigates the phenomenon of Christian centos, i.e. attempts at rewriting the Gospel stories in both the style and vocabulary of either Homer (Greek) or Virgil (Latin). Out of the classical epics an entirely new text emerged.
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