Listing 1 - 10 of 16 | << page >> |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
See How to Use Statistics for New Testament InterpretationThe Synoptic Problem and Statistics lays the foundations for a new area of interdisciplinary research that uses statistical techniques to investigate the synoptic problem in New Testament studies, which concerns the relationships between the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke. There are potential applications of the techniques to study other sets of similar documents. Explore Hidden Markov Models for Textual Data The book provides an introductory account of the synoptic problem and relevant theories, literature, and research at a level
Synoptic problem. --- Bible. --- Criticism, Textual --- Statistical methods.
Choose an application
Synoptic problem. --- Jesus Christ --- Bible. --- Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Choose an application
This book uncovers an early collection of sayings, called N, that are ascribed to Jesus and are similar to those found in the Gospel of Thomas and in Q, a document believed to be a common source, with Mark, for Matthew and Luke. In the process, the book sheds light on the literary methods of Mark and Thomas. A literary comparison of the texts of the sayings of Jesus that appear in both Mark and Thomas shows that each adapted an earlier collection for his own purpose. Neither Mark nor Thomas consistently gives the original or earliest form of the shared sayings; hence, Horman states, each used and adapted an earlier source. Close verbal parallels between the versions in Mark and Thomas show that the source was written in Greek. Horman's conclusion is that this common source is N. This proposal is new, and has implications for life of Jesus research. Previous research on sayings attributed to Jesus has treated Thomas in one of two ways: either as an independent stream of Jesus sayings written without knowledge of the New Testament Gospels and or as a later piece of pseudo-Scripture that uses the New Testament as source. This book rejects both views.
Synoptic problem. --- Jesus Christ --- Words. --- Gospel of Thomas (Coptic Gospel) --- Bible. --- Language, style. --- Criticism, Textual.
Choose an application
Choose an application
Delbert Burkett liefert neue Informationen, welche die Theorie der Markuspriorität und die Deuteromarkus-Hypothese infrage stellen. Er bietet die derzeit umfassendsten Argumente für die Proto-Markus-Hypothese und schließt, dass diese Theorie das Textmaterial des Markus am besten erklärt.
Synoptic problem. --- Synoptic Gospels --- two-document hypothesis --- Markan priority --- minor agreements --- Deutero-Mark --- Neues Testament --- Religionswissenschaft --- Antike --- Neuzeit
Choose an application
Hauptbeschreibung Sustained, comparative Synoptic studies do not stand alone methodologically in the humanities, but belong to a more general trend within cultural studies as well as in the humanities more broadly. Textual interpretation involves approaching specific texts composed more often than not by individual authors. In these texts, however, are embedded a myriad of conscious and unconscious relationships to historical and contemporary events, people, and other texts likewise connected historically and contemporaneously. In-depth understanding of a text evolves, therefore, al
Synoptic problem. --- Q hypothesis (Synoptics criticism) --- Bible. --- Hermeneutics --- Reception History --- Gospel of Mark --- Gospel of Matthew --- Kirchengeschichte --- Neues Testament --- Antike Religionsgeschichte
Choose an application
In Scribal Harmonization Cambry G. Pardee examines the earliest Greek manuscripts of the Synoptic Gospels for evidence that scribes altered the text of the Gospels—either deliberately or inadvertently—in ways that eliminated discrepancies between them. The phenomenon of harmonization demonstrates that a scribe’s memories of previous experiences with gospel traditions could have a powerful effect on the manuscripts that they produced. This book assembles for the first time a catalogue of harmonizing variants from every manuscript of Matthew, Mark, and Luke from the fourth century and earlier. Far from reducing the unique voices of the individual evangelists to a single melody, the earliest scribes contributed new tones, innovative strains, and fascinating harmonies to the four-fold gospel tradition.
Synoptic problem --- 226.1 --- 82.083 --- 226.1 Evangelies: synoptici; synoptisch probleem; Q; Quelle --- Evangelies: synoptici; synoptisch probleem; Q; Quelle --- 82.083 Teksteditie. Editiewetenschap --- Teksteditie. Editiewetenschap --- Bible. --- Evangelie (Book of the New Testament) --- Fukuinsho (Books of the New Testament) --- Gospels (Books of the New Testament) --- Gospels, Synoptic (Books of the New Testament) --- Synoptic Gospels (Books of the New Testament) --- Criticism, interpretation, etc. --- Harmonies. --- Synoptic problem.
Choose an application
In Verbal Aspect in Synoptic Parallels Wally Cirafesi answers the question of why the Synoptic Gospels at times employ different tense-forms to communicate the same action. The problem has typically been explained from the perspective of redaction criticism and temporal Aktionsart approaches to the Greek verbesserte Cirafesi challenges these approaches by reframing the discussion in terms of recent advances in verbal aspect theory and discourse analysis. He convincingly demonstrates that such differences in tense-form usage have to do with how each Gospel writer wishes to construct their discourses according to various levels of linguistic prominence.
Synoptic problem. --- Greek language, Biblical --- Aspect. --- Tense. --- Usage. --- Bible. --- Language, style. --- Synoptic problem --- 225.02*3 --- 226.1 --- Biblical Greek --- New Testament Greek --- 226.1 Evangelies: synoptici; synoptisch probleem; Q; Quelle --- Evangelies: synoptici; synoptisch probleem; Q; Quelle --- 225.02*3 Nieuw Testament: Griekse bijbelse filologie --- Nieuw Testament: Griekse bijbelse filologie --- Aspect --- Tense --- Usage --- Evangelie (Book of the New Testament) --- Fukuinsho (Books of the New Testament) --- Gospels (Books of the New Testament) --- Gospels, Synoptic (Books of the New Testament) --- Synoptic Gospels (Books of the New Testament)
Choose an application
Q hypothesis (Synoptics criticism) --- Christianity --- Kingdom of God. --- Devil. --- Kingdom of God --- Devil --- Religion --- Philosophy & Religion --- Beelzebub --- Beelzebul --- Lucifer --- Satan --- Satanael --- Satanail --- Demonology --- God, Kingdom of --- Eschatology --- God (Christianity) --- Religions --- Church history --- Logia source (Synoptics criticism) --- Q document (Synoptics criticism) --- Sayings source (Synoptics criticism) --- Synoptic problem --- Two source hypothesis (Synoptics criticism) --- Church --- Origin. --- Origin --- Foundation --- Bible. --- Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Choose an application
The American and European public has a voracious appetite for more information about Jesus and the formation of early Christianity. The best-selling books on the subject by Marcus Borg, John Dominic Crossan, John Meyer, and Luke Timothy Johnson, among many others, attest to this hunger. But each of these scholars presents his own reading of the historical information, usually beginning with the earliest known Jesus-related material, Jesus'' sayings, and leads the public into a particular understanding of Jesus and the early Jesus movements. The New Q will provide the general public with the or
Q hypothesis (Synoptics criticism) --- Logia source (Synoptics criticism) --- Q document (Synoptics criticism) --- Sayings source (Synoptics criticism) --- Synoptic problem --- Two source hypothesis (Synoptics criticism) --- Bible. --- Evangelie (Book of the New Testament) --- Fukuinsho (Books of the New Testament) --- Gospels (Books of the New Testament) --- Gospels, Synoptic (Books of the New Testament) --- Synoptic Gospels (Books of the New Testament) --- Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Listing 1 - 10 of 16 | << page >> |
Sort by
|