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To recover what has been lost : essays on eschatology, intertextuality, and reception history in honor of Dale C. Allison Jr. / edited by Tucker S. Ferda, Daniel Frayer-Griggs, Nathan C. Johnson.
- Format:
- Book
- Series:
- Supplements to Novum Testamentum ; v. 183.
- Supplements to Novum Testamentum, 0167-9732 ; volume 183
- Language:
- English
- Greek, Ancient (to 1453)
- Subjects (All):
- Eschatology.
- Eschatology, Jewish.
- Intertextuality in the Bible.
- Christianity and other religions--Judaism.
- Christianity and other religions.
- Judaism.
- Judaism--Relations--Christianity.
- Relations.
- Christianity.
- Bible--Criticism, interpretation, etc.
- Bible.
- Interfaith relations.
- Genre:
- Criticism, interpretation, etc.
- Festschriften.
- Physical Description:
- xix, 450 pages ; 25 cm.
- Manufacture:
- United Kingdom : Printed by Printforce.
- Place of Publication:
- Leiden ; Boston : Brill, [2021].
- Language Note:
- Includes quotations in Greek.
- Summary:
- "Over the course of his prolific career, Dale Allison has enriched our understanding of Jewish and Christian hopes about the end of history, advanced nuanced readings of ancient texts in light of their scriptural and cultural conversation partners, and deepened our knowledge of the history of biblical interpretation throughout the ages. In all of these ways, he has sought, in the words of T.S. Eliot, "to recover what has been lost." In "To Recover What Has Been Lost": Essays on Eschatology, Intertextuality, and Reception History in Honor of Dale C. Allison Jr., leading biblical scholars and historians offer ground-breaking studies on Jewish and Christian eschatology, intertextuality, and reception history-three areas particularly evident in Allison's scholarship. These essays reconstruct the past, advance fresh readings, and reclaim overlooked exegetical insights. In so doing, they too "recover what has been lost.""-- Provided by publisher.
- "Over the course of his career, Dale Allison has enriched our understanding of Jewish and Christian hopes about the end of history, advanced nuanced readings of ancient texts in light of their scriptural and cultural conversation partners, and deepened our knowledge of the history of biblical interpretation throughout the ages. In all of these ways, he has sought, in the words of T.S. Eliot, 'recover what has been lost.' In ''To Recover What Has Been Lost': Essays on Eschatology, Intertextuality, and Reception History in Honor of Dale C. Allison Jr.', leading biblical scholars and historians offer ground-breaking studies on Jewish and Christian eschatology, intertextuality, and reception history--three areas particularly evident in Allison's scholarship. These essays reconstruct the past, advance fresh readings, and reclaim overlooked exegetical insights. In so doing, they too recover what has been lost."--Back cover.
- Contents:
- Foreword / Christian D. Kettler
- Part 1: Eschatology. 'Al Tirah' ("Fear not!") : Jewish apocalyptic eschatology, from Schweitzer to Allison, and after / Paula Fredriksen
- Clarifying the background of Jesus' eschatological parables (4Q541) / James Hamilton Charlesworth
- Jesus and John Ball : millenarian prophets / James Crossley
- The eschatology of the Gospel of Matthew / Paul Foster
- Matthew and Paul on Torah observance : is Matthew's Gospel anti-Pauline, pro-Pauline, or un-Pauline? / Lidija Novakovic
- New Jerusalem, the city-bride : what she Is and what she is not / Edith M. Humphrey
- Untimely death : is there a good time to die? / Jared W. Ludlow
- Part 2: Intertextuality. Sacred subversion : ironic twists on Biblical Psalms / Joel Marcus
- The book of the genesis of Jesus Christ (Matthew 1:1) / Chris Keith
- Topographical christology in Matthew's narrative of Jesus' birth and infancy / Robert H. Gundry
- The love commandment in the authentic Pauline letters and Ephesians 5:2 : an intertextual study in the development of agape ethics in the Pauline corpus / Matthias Konradt
- James and Paul on the works of the law and the pure food of 4QMMT / Craig A. Evans
- Verbatim citations in James / John S. Kloppenborg
- Part 3: Reception History. The peril of modernising and de-modernising Jesus : a cognitive perspective / Gerd Theissen
- Your will be done : remembering Jesus' submission to the Father / Rafael Rodríguez
- The orthodox redaction of Mark : how Matthew rescued Mark's reputation / Mark Goodacre
- The letter of James and the divine liturgy / Alicia J. Batten
- Conceiving the elect : rhe Virgin, the matriarchs, and the God of the womb / Nancy Klancher
- From Reimarus to Allison : the quest for Jesus and the christological "thunderbolt" (Matt 11:25-27 // Luke 10:21-22) / Brant Pitre
- Bultmann's Jesus in America / Stephen J. Patterson.
- Notes:
- Twenty contributions, in English.
- Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
- Other Format:
- Online version: To recover what has been lost
- ISBN:
- 9789004443501
- 9004443509
- OCLC:
- 1230107931
- Publisher Number:
- 9789004443501
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