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Comparative Handbook to the Gospels of Matthew and Luke: Comparisons with Pseudepigrapha, the Qumran Scrolls, and Rabbinic Literature [Kietas viršelis]

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"This Handbook provides any commentator - whose purposes might include writing a consecutive treatment of a Gospel, or engaging with episodic themes or passages, or preparing a particular section of the Gospel for study, teaching, or preaching - with resources from the Gospels' Judaic environment that appear useful for understanding the texts themselves. Translation, presentation, comparison with Judaica, and occasional comments are all designed with that end in view. Materials are included from the Pseudepigrapha (together with Philo and Josephus), discoveries related to Qumran, and Rabbinic Literature (inclusive of the Targumim). As in a previous volume that dealt with Mark's Gospel, this Comparative Handbook targets the issue of comparison more than analysis or commentary"--

This Comparative Handbook surveys the Judaic environment of the Gospels of Matthew and Luke. Analogies are traced with the Pseudepigrapha (together with Philo and Josephus), discoveries related to Qumran, and Rabbinic Literature (inclusive of the Targumim).
Preface vii
Introductions 1(1)
1 Apocrypha, Pseudepigrapha, Philo and Josephus
1(5)
2 The Dead Sea Scrolls
6(18)
3 The Rabbinic Canon
24(16)
4 The Targumim
40(7)
The Comparison 47(890)
Matthew and Luke Passage Index 937(3)
Index of Modern Authors 940(3)
Index of Topics 943
Alan J. Avery-Peck, PhD. (1981), is Professor of Religious Studies and Kraft-Hiatt Professor of Judaic Studies at the College of the Holy Cross, Worcester, MA, USA. A specialist in early Rabbinic Judaism, he wrote the introduction and commentary to 2 Corinthians, in A.J. Levine and Marc Brettler, eds., The Jewish Annotated New Testament (2nd edition, Oxford, 2017).

Bruce Chilton (PhD Cambridge, 1976) is Bernard Iddings Bell Professor of Philosophy and Religion at Bard College. Recent works include Rabbi Jesus (Doubleday, 2000), The Targums. A Critical Introduction (with Paul Flesher; Baylor and Brill, 2011), and Resurrection Logic (Baylor, 2019).

Darrell Bock (Phd, Aberdeen, 1983) is Senior Research Professor of New Testament Studies and Executive Director of Cultural Engagement at Dallas Theological Seminary. He is the author and editor of several books, including technical studies on blasphemy and exaltation in Judaism and on the historical Jesus.

Craig A. Evans, Ph.D. (1983), Claremont, D.Habil. (2009), Budapest, is John Bisagno Distinguished Professor of Christian Origins at Houston Baptist University in Texas. He has published several books and articles on the historical Jesus and the use of Israels scriptures in the New Testament and early Christianity. These include Jesus and His Contemporaries (Brill, 2005), Jesus and the Remains of His Day (Hendrickson, 2015), and Jesus and the Manuscripts (Hendrickson, 2020).

Daniel M. Gurtner, PhD (2005), has published broadly in the New Testament and Second Temple Judaism, notably the award-winning T&T Clark Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism edited with Loren T. Stuckenbruck (2 vols., 2020). His primary research interests lie in the gospels and their interface with the Hebrew Bible and Second Temple Judaism, as in his published dissertation, The Torn Veil: Matthews Exposition of the Death of Jesus (2007). He is currently writing the Word Biblical Commentary on the Gospel of Matthew.