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Authoritative Writings in Early Judaism and Early Christianity: Their Origin, Collection, and Meaning [Kietas viršelis]

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Recent scholarship on the history of the biblical canons has increasingly recognised that the Jewish and Christian Bibles were not formed independently of each other but amid controversial debate and competition. But what does it mean that the formation of the Christian Bible cannot be separated from the developments that led to the Jewish Bible? The articles in this collection start with the assumption that the authorisation of writings had already begun in Israel and Judaism before the emergence of Christianity and was continued in the first centuries CE by Judaism and Christianity in their respective ways. They deal with a broad range of sources, such as writings which came to be part of the Hebrew Bible, literature from Qumran, the Septuagint, or early Jewish apocalypses. At the same time they deal, for example, with structures of authorisation related to New Testament writings, examine the role of authoritative texts in so-called Gnostic schools, and discuss the authority of late antique apocryphal literature.
Introduction 1(4)
Textual Authority in Ancient Israel and Judah: Factors and Forces of its Development
5(18)
Konrad Schmid
The Authority of the Scriptures of Israel in the Qumran Corpus
23(26)
Jorg Frey
2 Baruch, 4 Ezra, and Israel's Scriptures
49(18)
Matthias Henze
The Meaning of the Septuagint in the Process of Authorization of Israelite Writings
67(12)
Natalio Fernandez Marcos
Jesus and the Jewish Writings
79(36)
Armand Puig I Tarrech
The Use of Jewish Writings and Their Collections in the New Testament Gospels
115(14)
Dieter T. Roth
The Use of «Canonical» and «Non-canonical» Texts in Early Christianity and its Influence on the Authorization of Christian Writings
129(36)
Jens Schroter
Die Autoritat der Schrift bei Paulus
165(24)
Martin Meiser
«He Still Speaks!» - The Authority of Scripture in Hebrews
189(20)
Benjamin J. Ribbens
Michael H. Kibbe
Strategies of Authorizing Tradition in the Letter of James
209(16)
Susanne Luther
Marcion, the Writings of Israel, and the Origins of the «New Testament»
225(14)
Judith M. Lieu
What Kind of Jewish Bible Did the Gnostics Use?
239(18)
Jean-Daniel Dubois
Authority and Canon according to Some Ancient «Christian» Apocalypses: 5 Ezra and the Tiburtine Sibyl
257(14)
Tobias Nicklas
Early Christian Book Production and the Concept of Canon
271(18)
Juan Chapa
Hebrew Psalm 91/ Greek Psalm 90: Collections and Contexts, and a Text of Authority
289(24)
Thomas J. Kraus
List of Contributors 313(2)
Index of Ancient Sources 315(23)
Index of Modern Authors 338(9)
Index of Subjects 347
Geboren 1967; 2000 Dr. theol.; 2005-07 Professor für Neues Testament an der Radboud Universität Nimwegen, Niederlande; seit 2007 Professor für Exegese und Hermeneutik des Neuen Testaments an der Universität Regensburg; Research Associate an der University of the Free State, Bloemfontein, Südafrika; seit 2018 Leiter des Centre for Advanced Studies "Beyond Canon" an der Universität Regensburg; seit 2019 Adjunct Ordinary Professor an der Catholic University of America, Washington, D.C., USA. is Professor of Exegesis and Theology of the New Testament and the Ancient Christian Apocrypha at the Faculty of Theology of the Humboldt University of Berlin.