Academia.edu no longer supports Internet Explorer.
To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to upgrade your browser.
…
208 pages
1 file
AI-generated Abstract
This work on New Testament Introduction aims to serve as a classroom resource primarily for students, integrating traditional conservative scholarship with a focus on the texts as they were transmitted to the Church. It emphasizes the divine inspiration of the Bible while providing a limited critique of critical perspectives, prioritizing the constructive aspects of the New Testament writings. Acknowledging influential scholars, the text seeks to bridge the gap between traditional interpretations and modern educational needs.
a brief introduction to the New Testament
A brief introduction to the New Testament
2009
Maximum Registration: 40 Catalog Description: An introduction to (1) the literature of the New Testament in its socio-historical, literary and canonical contexts; and (2) critical study of the New Testament.
Religions, 2019
This special issue of Religions focuses on seven of the most important formal methods used to interpret the New Testament today. Several of the articles also touch on Old Testament/Hebrew Bible interpretation. In line with the multiplicity of methods for interpretation of texts in the humanities in general, biblical study has never before seen so many different methods. This situation poses both opportunities and challenges for scholars and students alike. This issue contains contributions by a mix of established scholars and younger scholars who have recently demonstrated their expertise in a certain method. Some articles will be easily accessible only to biblical scholars, but most will be accessible and instructive for beginning-and intermediate-level students of the Bible. I hope that the free-access essays offered here will become required reading in many universities and seminaries. The readership statistics displayed with each article, with information about how they have been read since their online publication here, show that they already have a wide appeal. I want to thank these authors for their contribution to this issue and for working so well with me and indirectly with the anonymous peer reviewers. Here, adapted from their abstracts, are brief introductions to their articles. Michele A. Connolly's article, "Antipodean and Biblical Encounter: Postcolonial Vernacular Hermeneutics in Novel Form," gives a post-secular exploration of what the Bible offers to modern-day Australia. She maintains that Australian culture, despite its secularity, has a capacity for spiritual awareness in ways that resonate with the Bible. Connolly employs R. S. Sugirtharajah's concept of "vernacular hermeneutics" to show that a contemporary Australian novel, The Shepherd's Hut by Tim Winton, expresses an Australian spirituality saturated with the images and values of the New Testament, but in a non-religious literary form that needs interpretation for a secular audience. Connolly's creative and fascinating article speaks not only to the Australian context but can serve as a model for the intersection of postcolonial biblical criticism and contemporary literature from many parts of the post-Christian world. "A Deep-Language Mathematical Analysis of Gospels, Acts and Revelation," by Emilio Matricciani and Liberato De Caro, offers a different kind of statistical analysis of the New Testament than scholars may be familiar with. It uses mathematical methods developed for studying what the authors call deep-language parameters of literary texts, for example, the number of words per sentence, the number of characters per word, the number of words between interpunctions (punctuation within sentences), and the number of interpunctions per sentence. Matricciani and De Caro consider, in concert with generally-accepted conclusions of New Testament scholarship, the full texts of the canonical Gospels, Acts and Revelation, then the Gospel passages attributable to the triple tradition (Matthew, Mark and Luke), to the double tradition (Matthew and Luke), to the single tradition in Matthew and Luke, and to the Q source. The results confirm and reinforce some common conclusions about the Gospels, Acts, Revelation, and Q source, but the authors show that they cast some new light on the capacity of the short-term memory of the readers/listeners of these texts. The authors posit that these New Testament writings fit very well in the larger Greek literature of the time. For readers unaccustomed to using
Review of Biblical Literature, 2013
Religious Studies Review, 2009
Although this book seems imbalanced as three-quarters of the work is essentially a history of scholarship, it offers a very helpful introduction to an aspect of literary analysis that is rarely given the attention that it deserves amidst biblical scholars. While it does not succeed in its goal to provide "a comprehensive guide" to biblical point of view, it succeeds excellently in offering a general introduction to the phenomenon, accessible to all audiences.
Loading Preview
Sorry, preview is currently unavailable. You can download the paper by clicking the button above.
Asian Journal of Pentecostal Studies and APTS Press, 2016
Scottish Journal of Theology, 1957
Review of James D. G. Dunn, New Testament Theology: An Introduction (Library of Biblical Theology; Nashville: Abingdon, 2009)., 2012
The Importance of Background Material in the Study of the New Testament, 2002
New Blackfriars, 2010
Religious Studies Review, 2000
Review of Peter Balla, Challenges to New Testament Theology: An Attempt to Justify the Enterprise (Peabody, Mass.: Hendrickson, 1997)., 2012
Journal of Early Christian History, 2020