Scripture, interpretation, or authority? : motives and arguments in Jesus' halakic conflicts /
Hauptbeschreibung In this study of motives and arguments in Jesus' halakic conflicts, Thomas Kazen suggests a way out of the present methodological impasse in the use of traditional criteria of authenticity in historical Jesus research, at least when it comes to those Jesus traditions that rela...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Tübingen, Germany :
Mohr Siebeck,
[2013]
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Colección: | Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament ;
320. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover ; Preface; Table of Contents; Abbreviations; Chapter 1: Introduction: the historical Jesus and halakic development; 1.1 The problem: whose motives?; 1.2 The background: Jesus and the law; 1.3 The conditions: prospects of history; 1.4 The methods: criteria, critical analyses, and historical hypotheses; 1.5 The aims: goals, intentions, and psychological criticism; 1.6 The new turn: development of halakic reasoning; 1.7 The way forward
- in this case; Chapter 2: The Sabbath; 2.1 State of discussion; 2.2 Texts and sources; 2.3 The development of contemporary Sabbath halakah.
- 2.3.1 Prohibited work in early halakah2.3.2 The Mishnah and forbidden acts of labour; 2.3.3 Life-saving and healing; 2.4 Motives in the Jesus tradition; 2.4.1 The cornfield incident; 2.4.2 The Sabbath healings ; Chapter 3: Purity; 3.1 State of discussion; 3.2 Texts and sources; 3.3 The development of contemporary purity halakah; 3.3.1 Sources of impurity; 3.3.2 The corpse and corpse impurity; 3.3.3 People with skin disease; 3.3.4 Genital dischargers; 3.3.5 Graded purification and the defilement of hands; 3.4 Motives in the Jesus tradition; 3.4.1 Divine command against human tradition.
- 3.4.2 The central saying3.4.3 Halakic innovation and anachronism; 3.4.4 Realism in Luke and P. Oxy. 840; Chapter 4: Divorce; 4.1 State of discussion; 4.2 Texts and sources; 4.3 The development of contemporary divorce halakhah; 4.3.1 Law of no return; 4.3.2 Supposed criticism of divorce; 4.3.3 Remarriage and grounds for divorce; 4.3.4 Women's right to divorce; 4.4 Motives in the Jesus tradition; 4.4.1. The conflict story; 4.4.2 The separate saying; 4.4.3 The exceptive clause; 4.4.4 Who will marry a divorcee?; Chapter 5: Roles and motives in the conflict narratives.
- 5.1 Models of halakic development5.2 Summarizing results ; 5.3 Innovation and interpretation; 5.4 Authority and uniqueness; 5.5 Motives and beyond; Appendix: Synoptic comparison of key texts; A. The Sabbath; B. Purity; C. Divorce; Bibliography; Sources; Ancient Near Eastern texts; Hebrew Bible; LXX; Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha; Dead Sea Scrolls; New Testament; Josephus and Philo; Other Greek texts; Coptic texts; Mishnah and Tosefta; Talmudim; Other rabbinic texts; Persian texts; Literature; Source index; A. Hebrew Bible; B. Apocrypha and Septuagint; C. Old Testament Pseudepigrapha.
- D. Dead Sea Scrolls and related textsE. Philo; F. Josephus; G. New Testament; H. Other Early Christian Texts; I. Rabbinic literature; Author index; Word index.