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El. knyga: Torah Revealed, Torah Fulfilled: Scriptural Laws In Formative Judaism and Earliest Christianity

  • Formatas: 256 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 03-Nov-2011
  • Leidėjas: T.& T.Clark Ltd
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780567506344
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: 256 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 03-Nov-2011
  • Leidėjas: T.& T.Clark Ltd
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780567506344
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The authors seek to identify the recurrent tensions, the blatant points of emphasis, the recurring indications of conflict and polemic. Framing the issue of the disposition of the Scriptural heritage in broad terms, they describe what characterizes the Gospels and the Mishnah, the letters of Paul and the Tosefta. In other words, if they take whole and complete the writings of first and second century people claiming to form the contemporary embodiment of Scriptures Israel and ask what they all stress as a single point of insistence, the answer is self-evident. Nearly every Christianity and nearly all known Judaisms appeal for validation to the Scriptures of ancient Israel, their laws and narratives, their prophecies and visions. To Scripture all parties appeal — but not to the same verses of Scripture. In Scripture, all participants to the common Israelite culture propose to find validation — but not to a common theological program subject to diverse interpretation. From Scripture, every community of Judaism and Christianity takes away what it will, but not with the assent of all the others. A look at the use of Scriptural law by early Christian and Rabbinical Jews, assessing points of tension, emphasis and conflict.

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A look at the use of Scriptural law by early Christian and Rabbinical Jews, assessing points of tension, emphasis and conflict.
Preface ix
Part One Idolatry and Paganism
1 Scripture's Account: Idolatry and Paganism
3(22)
Baruch A. Levine
2 Rabbinic Reading: Idolatry and Paganism
25(8)
Jacob Neusner
3 Early Christian Interpretation: The Case of Justin Martyr
33(12)
Bruce D. Chilton
Part Two The Nazirite
4 Scripture's Account: The Nazirite
45(11)
Baruch A. Levine
5 Rabbinic Reading: The Nazirite
56(7)
Jacob Neusner
6 The New Testament's Interpretation: The Nazirite Vow and the Brother of Jesus
63(14)
Bruce D. Chilton
Part Three The Sabbath
7 Scripture's Account: The Sabbath
77(12)
Baruch A. Levine
8 Rabbinic Reading: The Sabbath
89(15)
Jacob Neusner
9 Early Christian Interpretation: Sunday in the New Testament
104(9)
Bruce D. Chilton
Part Four Dietary Purity
10 Scripture's Account: Dietary Purity
113(11)
Baruch A. Levine
11 Rabbinic Reading: Clean and Unclean Foods
124(7)
Jacob Neusner
12 The New Testament's Interpretation: Eucharist as Holy Food, Mimesis of Sacrifice
131(12)
Bruce D. Chilton
Part Five Sexual Purity
13 Scripture's Account: Sexual Purity
143(17)
Baruch A. Levine
14 Rabbinic Reading: Sexual Purity
160(13)
Jacob Neusner
15 Christian Interpretation: Sexuality and Family in Christianity
173(14)
Bruce D. Chilton
Part Six Lex Talionis
16 Scripture's Account: Lex Talionis
187(17)
Baruch A. Levine
17 An Eye for an Eye: Lex Talionis in Talmudic Law
204(13)
Baruch A. Levine
18 The New Testament's Interpretation: Jesus' Lex Talionis
217(12)
Bruce D. Chilton
Notes 229(8)
Index 237
Bruce Chilton, New Testament and Judaic scholar, is Bernard Iddings Bell Professor of Religion at Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, NY. He is a co-author of The Body of Faith (Trinity), God in the World (Trinity), and Comparing Spiritualities (Trinity).Baruch Levine is the Skirball Professor Emeritus of Bible and Ancient Near Eastern Studies at New York University . He has written extensively in the field of biblical and ancient Near Eastern studies. Among his publications are commentaries on Numbers 1-20 and Numbers 21-36 in The Anchor Bible Commentary, the commentary on Leviticus in Torah Commentary (1999), and In the Presence of the Lord (1974). He is past president of the American Oriental Society, the Association for Jewish Studies, and the Biblical Colloquium, and is a former board member of the Society of Biblical Literature and Exegesis. He holds a Ph.D. in Mediterranean Studies from Brandeis University and earned a B.A. in comparative literature from Case Western Reserve University.Jacob Neusner is the author or editor of over 700 books including The Incarnation of God: The Character of Divinity in Formative Judaism.