توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Paul's Divine Christology (Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen Zum Neuen Testament 2.Reihe)
نام کتاب : Paul's Divine Christology (Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen Zum Neuen Testament 2.Reihe)
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : مسیح شناسی الهی پولس (Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen Zum Neuen Testament 2.Reihe)
سری :
نویسندگان : Chris Tilling
ناشر : Mohr Siebeck
سال نشر :
تعداد صفحات : 335
ISBN (شابک) : 9783161518652 , 3161518659
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 4 مگابایت
بعد از تکمیل فرایند پرداخت لینک دانلود کتاب ارائه خواهد شد. درصورت ثبت نام و ورود به حساب کاربری خود قادر خواهید بود لیست کتاب های خریداری شده را مشاهده فرمایید.
فهرست مطالب :
Preface\nTable of Contents\nAbbreviations\nChapter 1. Paul’s divine-Christology. An introduction\n 1. Framing the debate\n 2. Two wider concerns\n 3. An overview of the argument\nChapter 2. A Pauline divine-Christology? A history of research\n 1. Introduction\n 2. Pre-1970s scholarship and Pauline divine-Christology\n 3. Post-1970s scholarship and Pauline divine-Christology\n 3.1. The post-1970s engagement with the first question\n 3.2. The post-1970s engagement with the second question\n 3.2.1. Arguments involving theological language and titles\n 3.2.2. Arguments through Paul’s christological hermeneutic or exegesis\n 3.2.3. The christological significance of Paul’s experience of the risen Lord\n 3.2.4. The alleged ‘worship’ of Jesus in Paul\n 3.2.5. Gordon Fee’s Pauline Christology\n 4. Conclusion and bridge\nChapter 3. Preparing the stage. Reflections on the works of Gordon Fee, Larry Hurtado and Richard Bauckham\n 1. Introduction\n 2. The focus of Fee’s Pauline Christology\n 2.1. Fee’s definition of ‘Christology’\n 2.2. Fee and Christ’s pre-existence in Paul\n 3. Inner tensions in Fee’s Pauline Christology\n 3.1. A Christology in Paul’s letters?\n 3.2. The overlap between Christology and soteriology\n 3.3. Subordination and Fee’s method\n 3.4. Fee, identity and being\n 3.5. Devotion to Christ, soteriology and Christology\n 4. Fee’s synthesising method\n 4.1. Paul and the Septuagint\n 4.2. Fee’s titular study and divisions\n 4.3. Divine prerogatives and Fee’s interpretative patterns\n 4.4. Fee and the assessment christological significance\n 5. Fee and relationality\n 5.1. On Fee affirming a relational emphasis, while underestimating its significance\n 5.1.1. Does Fee really ‘follow the train’ of Bauckham (or rightly evaluate Hurtado)?\n 5.1.2. Bridging the gap between soteriology and Christology with relational language\n 5.2. Fee, relationality and exegesis\n 6. Hurtado and Christ-devotion\n 6.1. Four critical responses to Hurtado\n 6.2. Hurtado’s response to these criticisms\n 6.3. Remaining problems with Hurtado’s thesis\n 7. Bauckham and the divine identity\n 8. Conclusion\nChapter 4. The approach of this thesis. The relation between the risen Lord and believers\n 1. Introduction\n 2. The first question about Paul’s Jewish-style faith in God\n 3. The second question: A new proposal\n 4. A note on the language of ‘relation to’ and ‘believers’\n 5. Conclusion\nChapter 5. 1 Corinthians 8:1–10:22, and the relation between the risen Lord and believers\n 1. Introduction: framing and pursuing an exegetical study\n 2. Framing Paul’s argument: relational faith in God in 1 Corinthians 8\n 2.1. 1 Corinthians 8:1–3\n 2.2. Relational monotheism in 1 Corinthians 8:6\n 2.3. The Intellektualismus of the ‘knowledgeable’: Gäckle’s thesis\n 2.4. A suggested reading of 1 Corinthians 8:1–7. Relational monotheism as the key to the whole section\n 3. The believer’s relation to Christ in Paul’s argument\n 3.1. 1 Corinthians 8:6, the Shema, and Paul’s relational Christology\n 3.2. 1 Corinthians 8:12 and sin against Christ\n 3.3. 1 Corinthians 10:9 and the Pentateuchal language in 10:6–10 concerning the relation between YHWH and Israel\n 3.4. 1 Corinthians 10:14–21 and fellowship with Christ over against idolatry\n 3.5. 1 Corinthians 10:22 and the consequence of idolatry in Pentateuchal language\n 4. Conclusion\nChapter 6. The Christ-relation in Paul’s undisputed letters\n 1. Introduction\n 2. Paul’s Christ-shaped goals and motivations\n 3. Various expressions of Christ-devotion\n 4. The passionate nature of this Christ-devotion\n 5. What Paul contrasts with Christ-devotion\n 6. The presence and activity of the risen Lord\n 7. The absence of the risen Lord\n 7.1. Until he comes\n 7.2. The παρουσι\'α of Christ\n 7.3. Away from the Lord\n 7.4. Christ is in heaven\n 8. An absent Lord whose presence is mediated by the Spirit\n 9. Communications between the risen Lord and believers\n 9.1. Communication from Paul and believers to Christ\n 9.2. Communication from Christ to believers and Paul\n 10. The nature and character of Christ’s risen lordship\n 10.1. Paul’s understanding of Christ’s character\n 10.2. The scope and nature of Christ’s risen lordship\n 11. An overview and summary of the Pauline Christ-relation\nChapter 7. The Christ-relation: a pattern of data Paul would recognise?\n 1. Introduction\n 2. Paul’s extensive employment of elements of the proposed pattern\n 3. A unified existential reality\n 4. Elements of the proposed pattern are regularly brought together by Paul\n 5. Conclusion\nChapter 8. 1 Corinthians 16:22. Approaching Paul in light of the Christ-relation\n 1. Introduction\n 2. Present scholarly concerns in relation to Paul’s Christology in 16:22\n 3. Reengaging 16:22 in terms of the relation between the risen Lord and believers\n 4. Conclusions\nChapter 9. Jewish relation to figures other than God, and the Pauline Christ-relation\n 1. Introduction\n 2. A background to Paul’s Christ-devotion in the worship of figures other than God?\n 2.1. Pauline Christ-devotion and Sirach 44–50\n 2.2. Pauline Christ-devotion and the Life of Adam and Eve\n 3. A thought-experiment on Paul’s Christ-relation, Sirach and the Life of Adam and Eve\n 4. The Pauline Christ-relation and the Similitudes of Enoch\n 4.1. Relational language and the Enochic ‘Son of Man’\n 4.2. Paul’s Christ-relation, the Lord of Spirits and the Son of Man\n 5. The view from here\n 6. The unique divine identity\n 7. Conclusion\nChapter 10. Paul’s Christ-relation and the divine-Christology debate\n 1. Introduction\n 2. The Pauline Christ-relation is a divine-Christology\n 3. Revisiting arguments used to deny a Pauline divine-Christology\n 4. Conclusion\nChapter 11. Paul’s divine-Christology\n 1. A summary and conclusion\nAppendix\n 1. Introduction\n 2. Negotiating the ‘ugly broad ditch’ between the ‘Jesus of history’ and the ‘Christ of faith’\n 3. Paul’s relational divine-Christology and modern theological discourse\n 3.1. The mode of Paul’s christological language\n 3.2. The scope of Paul’s christological language\nBibliography\nIndex of Ancient Sources\n 1. Hebrew Bible and Septuagint\n 2. New Testament\n 3. Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha\n 4. Other Early Jewish Sources\nIndex of Modern Authors\nIndex of Subjects