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Hauptbeschreibung In den ersten vier Büchern des Pentateuch werden die dargestellten Ereignisse aus der Perspektive eines Erzählers geschildert, der selbst völlig in den Hintergrund tritt. Mose bekommt als tragende Figur innerhalb dieses großen von Ex bis Num dargestellten Geschichtsbogens ein prägnantes Gesicht. Nach dem biblischen Erzähler ergreift am Ende der Tora Mose selbst als profilierter Erzähler das Wort. Er ist Augenzeuge, der das Erlebte einer neuen Generation an der Schwelle zum verheißenen Land mit auf den Weg gibt. Damit ist im Buch Deuteronomium eine völlig neue Erzäh
Deuteronomistic history (Biblical criticism) --- Bible. --- Bible --- Criticism, interpretation, etc. --- Canonical criticism. --- Pentateuch --- Deuteronomium --- Mose --- Erzählperspektive --- Altes Testament
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Three major essays by Baruch Halpern, Brian Peckham and Paul E. Dion deal with traumatic changes in Israelite culture, in particular the transition from the traditional culture of Israel in Iron Age IIA (tenth-ninth centuries) to a new, more widely literate culture in the eighth-seventh centuries BCE. These essays throw into relief changes in legal, political and religious culture in Judah in the last 150 years of its independence. Their combined implications for the origins of Western law and civilization, and for the models from which Reformation and Enlightenment political theory were drawn
Jews --- History --- Israel --- Antiquities. --- Jewish law --- Judaism --- 222.4 --- 296*52 --- 296*52 Joodse ethiek: Halacha; Minhag (gewoonten); Tora --- Joodse ethiek: Halacha; Minhag (gewoonten); Tora --- Deuteronomium
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J. Cornelis de Vos examines the impact and reception of the Decalogue up to 200 CE, scrutinizing the versions of the Decalogue, and the history of the Decalogue in ancient Jewish writings, the New Testament, and early Christian writings. Almost all texts show an interconnection of identity and normativity: the Decalogue functions as an expression of fundamental moral concepts of socio-religious groups. At the same time, these groups enhance the Decalogue with normativity—sometimes even expanding on it—to make it a text that generates their own identity. This is the first study that presents an in-depth and continuous analysis of the early history of the Decalogue. Der Wirkung und Rezeption des Dekalogs bis 200 n.Chr. widmet sich J. Cornelis de Vos in dieser Studie. Dafür erforscht er zunächst die alten Textzeugen der beiden Dekalogfassungen, um anschließend zu fragen, wie die Zehn Gebote bei antik-jüdischen Autoren, im Neuen Testament sowie in frühchristlichen Schriften aufgenommen wurden. Es zeigt sich eine Verbindung von Normativität und Identität: Der Dekalog gilt zumeist als Ausdruck der moralischen Grundauffassungen sozioreligiöser Gruppen; er wird gleichzeitig von diesen Gruppen mit Normativität aufgeladen – manchmal sogar erweitert – gerade um als Identität stiftend für die eigene Gruppe zu gelten. Dies ist die erste Studie, die eine detaillierte und durchgehende Geschichte des Dekalogs in der Antike beschreibt.
241.6 --- 222.4 --- 222.4 Deuteronomium --- 222.4 Le Deuteronome --- Deuteronomium --- Le Deuteronome --- 241.6 Decaloog. Tien geboden --- Decaloog. Tien geboden --- Ten commandments --- Bible. --- Commandments, Ten --- Decalogue --- Criticism, interpretation, etc., Jewish --- History. --- Criticism, interpretation, etc. --- History --- Versions. --- Ten commandments. --- 30-600 --- Early Church Period --- Primitive and Early Church Period --- History |y Early church, ca. 30-600.
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Der vorliegende Band versammelt internationale Beiträge zur literarischen Entstehung des Deuteronomistischen Geschichtswerks (DtrG) und zum "Deuteronomismus" im Bereich der Bücher Genesis bis Könige. Dabei wird das Wesen der alttestamentlichen Geschichtsschreibung ebenso diskutiert wie das redaktions- und kompositionsgeschichtliche Verhältnis zwischen "Pentateuch", "Hexateuch" und "Vorderen Propheten" insgesamt. The volume presents a collection of international papers on the literary genesis of the deuteronomistic history and on "Deuteronomism" in the books from Genesis to Kings. They discuss the essence of Old Testament historiography together with the overall historical editorial and compositional relationship between "Pentateuch", "Hexateuch" and "Early Prophets".
222.4 --- Deuteronomium --- Bible. --- Deuteronomium (Book of the Old Testament) --- Deuteronomy (Book of the Old Testament) --- Devarim (Book of the Old Testament) --- Kitāb-i Divārīm (Book of the Old Testament) --- Shinmeiki (Book of the Old Testament) --- Sifr al-Tathniyah (Book of the Old Testament) --- Sinmyŏnggi (Book of the Old Testament) --- Tas̲niyah (Book of the Old Testament) --- Tathniyah (Book of the Old Testament) --- Former Prophets --- Neviʼim rishonim --- Profetas primeros --- Prophetae Priores --- Criticism, interpretation, etc. --- Deuteronomism. --- Deuteronomium. --- Geschichtsbücher. --- Historiography. --- Redaktionsgeschichte. --- Religionsgeschichte. --- RELIGION / Biblical Criticism & Interpretation / Old Testament.
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478.63 --- Bijbelverhalen --- Bijbelverhalen : Exodus --- Bijbelverhalen : Leviticus --- Bijbelverhalen : Numeri --- Bijbelverhalen : Deuteronomium --- #gsdb11 --- Didactics of religion --- Bible OT. Pentateuch. Exodus --- Bible OT. Pentateuch. Leviticus --- Bible OT. Pentateuch. Numbers --- Bible OT. Pentateuch. Deuteronomy
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Bible. --- Sifrei. --- Deuteronomium (Book of the Old Testament) --- Deuteronomy (Book of the Old Testament) --- Devarim (Book of the Old Testament) --- Kitāb-i Divārīm (Book of the Old Testament) --- Shinmeiki (Book of the Old Testament) --- Sifr al-Tathniyah (Book of the Old Testament) --- Sinmyŏnggi (Book of the Old Testament) --- Tas̲niyah (Book of the Old Testament) --- Tathniyah (Book of the Old Testament) --- Sifre Deuteronomium --- Commentaries. --- Judaism --- History.
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To whom is Moses speaking in Deuteronomy? This question is controversial in OT scholarship. Some passages in Deuteronomy indicate that Moses is addressing the first exodus generation that witnessed Horeb (Deut 5:3-4), while other passages point to the second exodus generation that survived the wilderness (Deut 1:35; 2:14-16). Redaction critics such as Thomas Römer and John Van Seters view the chronological problems in Deuteronomy as evidence of multiple tradition layers. Although other scholars have suggested that Deuteronomy's conflation of chronology is a rhetorical move to unify Israel's generations, no analysis has thus far explored in detail how the blending of "you" and the "fathers" functions as a rhetorical device. However, a rhetorical approach to the "fathers" is especially appropriate in light of three features of Deuteronomy.First, a rhetorical approach recognizes that the repetitiveness of the Deuteronomic style is a homiletical strategy designed to inculcate the audience with memory. The book is shot through with exhortations for Israel to remember the past. Second, a rhetorical approach recognizes that collective memory entails the transformation of the past through actualization for the present. Third, a rhetorical approach to Deuteronomy accords well with the book's self-presentation as "the words that Moses spoke" (1:1). The book of Deuteronomy assumes a canonical posture by embedding the means of its own oral and written propagation, thereby ensuring that the voice of Moses speaking in the book of Deuteronomy resounds in Israel's ears as a perpetually authoritative speech-act.The Rhetoric of Remembrance demonstrates that Deuteronomy depicts the corporate solidarity of Israel in the land promised to the "fathers" (part 1), under the sovereignty of the same "God of the fathers" across the nation's history (part 2), as governed by a timeless covenant of the "fathers" between YHWH and his people (part 3). In the narrative world of Deuteronomy, the "fathers" begin as the patriarchs, while frequently scrolling forward in time to include every generation that has received YHWH's promises but nonetheless continues to await their fulfillment.Hwang's study is an insightful, innovative approach that addresses crucial aspects of the Deuteronomic style with a view to the theological effect of that style.Jerry Hwang (Ph.D., Wheaton College) serves as Assistant Professor of Old Testament at Singapore Bible College.
Bible. --- Deuteronomium (Book of the Old Testament) --- Deuteronomy (Book of the Old Testament) --- Devarim (Book of the Old Testament) --- Kitāb-i Divārīm (Book of the Old Testament) --- Shinmeiki (Book of the Old Testament) --- Sifr al-Tathniyah (Book of the Old Testament) --- Sinmyŏnggi (Book of the Old Testament) --- Tas̲niyah (Book of the Old Testament) --- Tathniyah (Book of the Old Testament) --- Criticism, interpretation, etc. --- 222.4 --- Deuteronomium --- HISTORY / Ancient / General.
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Jeffrey H. Tigay, A. M. Ellis Professor of Hebrew and Semitic Languages and Literatures at the University of Pennsylvania, master teacher and scholar extraordinaire, conservative rabbi and lifelong student of Torah receives due ovation in this exceptional volume, a tribute to his indelible impression on Jewish scholarship and pedagogy.The volume is arranged according to Professor Tigay's primary topics of interest: deuteronomic studies, ancient Israelite religion and its Near Eastern context, and ancient Israelite literary tradition. The reader will enjoy diverse studies such as "Gender Transformation and Transgression: Contextualizing the Prohibition of Cross-dressing in Deuteronomy 22:5," "The Problem of Evil in the Book of Job," and "Linen and the Linguistic Dating of P" and will value the erudition of scholars such as Moshe Greenberg, Emanuel Tov, Gary Rendsburg, William Hallo, and Baruch Levine.In the customary appreciations and throughout the volume, colleagues, students, and friends laud Professor Tigay's intellectual tenacity, relational warmth, pedagogical prowess, and devotion to Torah. A former student aptly speaks for those who know him best: "A scholar's immortality lies in his or her work. It rests too in his or her students and in the respect won from his or her colleagues. A Festschrift like this one for Jeff Tigay is merely a token of that legacy, the acknowledgment by his students and colleagues that the work is indeed worth celebrating." This legacy will surely be a boon and delight to the reader.
Deuteronomistic history (Biblical criticism) --- Deuteronomic history (Biblical criticism) --- Deuteronomists (Biblical criticism) --- DH (Biblical criticism) --- D document (Biblical criticism) --- Bible. --- Deuteronomium (Book of the Old Testament) --- Deuteronomy (Book of the Old Testament) --- Devarim (Book of the Old Testament) --- Kitāb-i Divārīm (Book of the Old Testament) --- Shinmeiki (Book of the Old Testament) --- Sifr al-Tathniyah (Book of the Old Testament) --- Sinmyŏnggi (Book of the Old Testament) --- Tas̲niyah (Book of the Old Testament) --- Tathniyah (Book of the Old Testament) --- Criticism, interpretation, etc. --- 222.4 --- Deuteronomium --- Festschrift - Libri Amicorum --- Bible --- Criticism, interpretation, etc --- HISTORY / Ancient / General.
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In the politico-religious history of the Deuteronomists, past, present and future mingle in an often inextricable way. Long obsolete traditions, which had been unacceptable to the Davidic dynasty, were rediscovered and adapted to the aims of the Deuteronomists. Personages of the past were condemned and blackened in the light of the new ideology, whereas others were glorified and embellished as heroes of faith because their ideas suited the historians. This inevitably raises the question whether the Bible can be trusted as a source book for writing a history of Israel. Apparently not, say scholars like T.L. Thompson, P.R. Davies and N.P. Lemche. In this volume a number of authors take up this challenge, stating that the radical rejection of the biblical testimony in favour of a history based mainly on archaeology is ill-advised. Several contributions to this volume draw instructive parallels between the process of re-writing the history of South Africa and the work of the Deuteronomists.
Deuteronomistic history (Biblical criticism) --- 222.4 --- 224 --- Deuteronomic history (Biblical criticism) --- Deuteronomists (Biblical criticism) --- DH (Biblical criticism) --- D document (Biblical criticism) --- Deuteronomium --- Profetische boeken van het Oude Testament --- Congresses --- Deuteronomistic history (Biblical criticism) - Congresses. --- Deuteronomist history (Biblical criticism) --- Prophet --- Prophets --- Biblical teaching --- Bible AT Deutéronome --- Prophètes --- Document D (critique biblique) --- Critique, interprétation, etc --- Enseignement biblique --- Prophet.
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The Deuteronomic or, more properly, Deuteronomistic History is a modern theoretical construct which holds that the books of Deuteronomy, Joshua, Judges, Samuel, and Kings constitute a single work, unified by a basic homogeneity in language, style, and content. This construct owes much to the influence of Martin Noth’s classic study of the Deuteronomistic History, contained in his larger Uberlieferungsgeschichtliche Studien. According to Noth, the Deuteronomist incorporated the deuteronomic law into the beginning of his work, framing it with speeches by Moses. The Deuteronomist then added other sources, such as tales of conquest and settlement, prophetic narratives and speeches, official annals and records. While this larger thesis has stood the test of time, there is much disagreement among contemporary scholars about a wide variety of issues. The present collection attempts to provide readers with an understanding of the important developments, methodologies, and points of view in the ongoing debate. Both current essays and some older, classic essays that have shaped the larger debate are included. Ten are newly translated into English. Each essay is prefaced by a detailed foreword by one of the editors that summarizes and places the essay in its appropriate context, making the volume ideal for use in seminars or courses, as well as for individuals wishing to become familiar with the state of discussion on the Deuteronomistic History.
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Jews
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Deuteronomic history (Biblical criticism)
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Deuteronomists (Biblical criticism)
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D document (Biblical criticism)
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History
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Bible.
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Former Prophets
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Neviʼim rishonim
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Profetas primeros
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Prophetae Priores
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Criticism, interpretation, etc.
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Deuteronomistisches Geschichtswerk.
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Deuteronomistic history.
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Bibel
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Mose
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Moses
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Devarim
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Debarim
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Deuteronomium
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Deuteronomy
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Deutéronome
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