توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب The Book of Revelation: Currents in British Research on the Apocalypse (Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen Zum Neuen Testament 2.Reihe)
نام کتاب : The Book of Revelation: Currents in British Research on the Apocalypse (Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen Zum Neuen Testament 2.Reihe)
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : کتاب مکاشفه: جریانات در تحقیقات بریتانیایی درباره آخرالزمان (Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen Zum Neuen Testament 2.Reihe)
سری :
نویسندگان : Garrick V Allen (editor), Ian Paul (editor), Simon P Woodman (editor)
ناشر : Mohr Siebeck
سال نشر :
تعداد صفحات : 355
ISBN (شابک) : 9783161538698 , 3161538692
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 5 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Cover\nAcknowledgments\nTable of Contents\nAbbreviations\nGarrick V. Allen: Introducing The Book of Revelation: Currents in British Research on the Apocalypse\nText, Structure, and Persuasion\n Garrick V. Allen: Reusing Scripture in the Book of Revelation: Techniques of Reuse and Habits of Reading\n Introduction\n Prolegomena\n Terminology\n Confirmation of Reference\n Techniques of Reuse of Zechariah 4\n Expansions\n Omission\n Alterations\n Alterations\n Reading Strategy and Reuse of Zechariah 4\n καὶ αἱ δύο λυχνίαι (Rev 11.4)\n ציני and πνεύματα (Rev 5.6b)\n Conclusion\n Andrew Harker: Prophetically Called Sodom and Egypt: The Affective Power of Revelation 11.1–13\n Introduction\n Holding together the affective and metaphorical aspects of the text\n Defining metaphor\n Five Observations\n 1. Original versus conventional metaphor\n 2. Open-ended versus determinate\n Isa 25.8//1 Cor 15.54\n Hos 13.14//1 Cor 15.55\n 3. Substantive-based metaphors versus non-substantive-based\n 4. Referent suppressed versus referent explicit\n 5. Allusion versus everyday imagery\n 15.27//Psalm 8.7\n 15.54-55//Isaiah 25.8; Hos 13.14\n Conclusion\n Ian Paul: Source, Structure, and Composition in the Book of Revelation\n Discontinuity and Composition\n Arguments for Compositional Unity\n Literary Seams\n Word Frequencies\n 1. Even distribution of occurrences\n 2. Lack of correlation between word occurrences from one unit to another\n 3. Overlap of series of occurrences\n 4. Prologue and epilogue\n Conclusion\nContext, Interpretation, and Genre\n Richard Bauckham: Judgment in the Book of Revelation\n 1. God’s Judgments are Just\n 2. God’s Relation to the Judgments\n 3. Jesus Christ’s Relation to the Judgments\n 4. The relation of the Prayers of the Saints to the Judgments\n 5. Prophetic Discernment of Evil\n 6. A Hermeneutical Approach For Twenty-First Century First-World Christians: Reading Revelation “As Laodiceans”\n 7. Judgment of the dead\n 1. Outside the City\n 2. The Second Death\n 3. The Lake of Fire\n Sarah Underwood Dixon: ‘The Testimony of Jesus’ in Light of Internal Self-References in the books of Daniel and 1 Enoch\n Introduction: Identifying the Issues\n The Book of Daniel\n Internal Self-References\n The Maśkîlîm\n Use of the Book\n The Book of 1 Enoch: The Book of Watchers + The Epistle of Enoch (1–36; 81.1–82.4c; 83–90; 91.1–10, 18–19; 92–105)\n Internal Self-References\n Use of the Book\n Conclusion: Implications for the Book of Revelation\n Sean Michael Ryan: ‘The Testimony of Jesus’ and ‘The Testimony of Enoch’: An emic Approach to the Genre of the Apocalypse\n Introduction: An emic Approach to the Genre of the Apocalypse\n “Testimony” ( תעודה/διαμαρτυρία) as a Generic Self-designation for Jubilees and Portions of 1 Enoch\n Jubilees’ self-designation: “The Torah and the Testimony”\n “The Testimony of Enoch” (1 En. 1–36; 72–82; 85–90; 91–105)\n The Apocalypse as “The Testimony of Jesus”(ἡ μαρτυρία Ἰησοῦ)?\n ἡ μαρτυρία Ἰησοῦ in the main body of the book: “Having (ἔχειν) the testimony of Jesus”\n ἡ μαρτυρία Ἰησοῦ as a self-designation for the Apocalypse in the literary frame\n “The Testimony of Jesus” (ἡ μαρτυρία Ἰησοῦ)as an emic genre label for the Apocalypse?\n Michelle Fletcher: Apocalypse Noir: How Revelation Defined and Defied a Genre\n Etymology\n Apocalyptic Recognition\n Genre Consolidation\n Summary\n Comparative Analysis: Film Noir and Neo-Noir\n Noir becomes film noir\n Neo-Noir\n Highlighting\n Fixing Perceptions: Selecting not Reflecting\n Intensifying and Exaggerating\n Summary\n Apocalypse Noir\n A Sensibility Portrayed: Apocalyptic\n Highlighting: Mixed Forms\n Intensifying: Revealing and Concealing\n Selecting and Fixing Perceptions: The Destruction of the World\n The Apocalyptic Neo-Apocalypse\n Conclusion\n Ronald Herms: πνευματικῶς and Antagonists in Revelation 11 Reconsidered\n Introduction: Rhetorical Analysis and John’s Apocalypse\n Spirit Language and the Interpretive Challenge of Revelation 11.8\n Working Assumptions and Rhetorical Context in Revelation 11.8\n 1. The Protected Temple and Trampled Outer Court Vision\n 2. The Two Witnesses Vision\n The Backstory to Revelation 11 – Tension Behind the Scenes\n Observations and Trajectories\n Conclusion\n W. Gordon Campbell: Facing Fire and Fury: One Reading of Revelation’s Violence in the Context of Recent Interpretation\n Story 1\n Story 2\n Two Stories In One\n Simon P. Woodman: Fire from Heaven: Divine Judgment in the Book of Revelation\n Introduction\n Playing with Fire\n A sign of divine presence\n A sign of divine judgment\n A sign of divine purification\n Conclusion\n Paul Middleton: Male Virgins, Male Martyrs, Male Brides: A Reconsideration of the 144,000 ‘who have not dirtied themselves with women’ (Revelation 14.4)\n Male Virgins\n Male Martyrs\n Male Brides\n Shane J. Wood: God’s Triumphal Procession: Re-examining the Release of Satan in the Light of Roman Imperial Imagery\n John’s Portrait: Overlooked Anomalies in Revelation 20.1–3, 7–10\n The Roman Triumph\n Key Features in the Roman Triumphal Procession\n The Roman Triumph in Imperial Propaganda\n The Roman Triumph in Revelation 19.11–21\n The Roman Triumph in Revelation 20.7–10\n Conclusion\nReception\n Christopher Rowland: British Interpretation of the Apocalypse: A Historical Perspective\n Gerrard Winstanley (c. 1609, d. 1676)\n Jane Lead (1624–1704) and Joanna Southcott (1750–1814)\n William Blake (1757–1827)\n Visualisation\n Concluding reflections\n Ian Boxall: The Mighty Angel with the Little Scroll: British Perspective on the Reception History of Revelation 10\n Christ as Mighty Angel\n The Angel and the Faithful Ministers\n John’s Prophetic Ministry\n Visualizing Revelation 10\n Final Reflections\n Jonathan Downing: The Women Clothed in the Sun: The Reception of Revelation 12 among Female British Prophets 1780–1814\n “The mysterious woman predicted [in] Rev. xii. Has actually now appeared, and in her the light of God is restored back to this earth”\n Elspeth Buchan\n Sarah Flaxmer\n Joanna Southcott\n Conclusions\nAfterword\n Steve Moyise: A Response to Currents in British Research on the Apocalypse\nBibliography\n Films\nAncient Primary Sources\n Dead Sea Scrolls\n Hebrew Bible/Old Testament\n Early Jewish Literature\n New Testament\n Early Christian Literature\n Rabbinic Literature\n Classical Literature\nIndex of Modern Authors\nSubject Index