The Doubt of the Apostles and the Resurrection Faith of the Early Church: The Post-Resurrection Appearance Stories of the Gospels in Ancient Reception ... Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament 2. Reihe)

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کتاب شک رسولان و ایمان رستاخیز کلیسای اولیه: داستان های ظاهری اناجیل پس از رستاخیز در پذیرش باستانی ... Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament 2. Reihe) نسخه زبان اصلی

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توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب The Doubt of the Apostles and the Resurrection Faith of the Early Church: The Post-Resurrection Appearance Stories of the Gospels in Ancient Reception ... Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament 2. Reihe)

نام کتاب : The Doubt of the Apostles and the Resurrection Faith of the Early Church: The Post-Resurrection Appearance Stories of the Gospels in Ancient Reception ... Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament 2. Reihe)
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : شک رسولان و ایمان رستاخیز کلیسای اولیه: داستان های ظاهری اناجیل پس از رستاخیز در پذیرش باستانی ... Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament 2. Reihe)
سری :
نویسندگان :
ناشر : JCB Mohr (Paul Siebeck)
سال نشر : 2019
تعداد صفحات : 588
ISBN (شابک) : 3161581652 , 9783161581656
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 4 مگابایت



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Cover
Titel
Acknowledgments
Table of Contents
Abbreviations
Part I: Introduction and Context
Chapter 1: Introduction
1.1 The Antidocetic Hypothesis in Previous Scholarship
1.1.1 The Materializing-Trajectory Theory and the Antidocetic Hypothesis
1.1.2 The Resilience of the Antidocetic Hypothesis
1.1.3 Objections to the Antidocetic Hypothesis
1.1.4 Unexamined Presuppositions about Antidocetic Polemic
1.2 Doubt as a Motif in the Resurrection Narratives
1.3 The Doubt Motif in Previous Scholarship
1.3.1 The Traditional View: Historical but Preserved for Apologetic Purposes
1.3.2 The Transformational View: Historically Derived but Modified for Apologetic Purposes
1.3.3 The Skeptical View: A Late, Apologetic Invention
1.3.4 The Form-Critical View: Genre-derived but Modified for Apologetic Purposes
1.3.5 A Consensus: Doubt as an Apologetic Device
1.3.6 A Political View: Doubt as Slander
1.3.7 Unexamined Presuppositions about the Doubt Motif
1.3.7 Unexamined Presuppositions about the Doubt Motif
1.4 Methodology
1.4.1 Reception History as a Historical-Critical Tool
1.4.2 Reception History and Unrecognized Modern Bias
1.4.3 Reception History and Ancient Bias
1.4.4 Methodology for Identifying Instances of Reception
1.4.5 The Structure of This Study
Chapter 2: Gnosticism, Docetism, and Doubt in Context
2.1 Gnosticism and Docetism
2.1.1 Gnosticism: Terms and Concepts
2.1.2 Docetism: Terms and Concepts
2.1.3 Gnostic Interpretive Methods
2.1.4 Docetization as an Interpretive Method
2.1.5 Orthodoxy and Heresy
2.2 Doubt and Unbelief in Early Christianity
2.2.1 The Doubt Motif in the Resurrection Narratives
2.2.2 Key Terms for Doubt and Unbelief
2.2.3 Faith, Doubt, and Early Christian Identity
2.2.4 Abraham’s Faith and the Apostles’ Doubt
2.2.5 The Condemnation of Doubt and Unbelief in Early Christianity
2.2.6 The Shame of Unbelief
2.2.7 “Unbeliever” as a Term of Abuse
2.2.8 Doubt as an Apologetic Device?
2.2.9 EXCURSUS: Philo’s Suppression and Softening of Abraham’s Doubt
Part II: The Reception of the Resurrection Narratives
Chapter 3: Two Early Readings of Luke 24: Docetic and Antidocetic
3.1 Ignatius, Smyrn. 3–5
3.1.1 Introduction
3.1.2 Ignatius’s Sources and Antidocetic Redaction
3.1.3 Conclusion
3.2 The “Ophites” of Irenaeus, Haer. 1.30
3.2.1 Introduction
3.2.2 A Cumulative Case for the Ophite use of Luke
3.2.3 The Ophite Response to Luke 24 and Its Implications
3.2.4 Marcion and the Ophites: Luke’s Text and the Biblical Canon
3.3 Conclusion
Chapter 4: The Great Omissions in Proto-Orthodox Apologetics: Doubts, Proofs, and the Resurrection of Jesus
4.1 1 Clement
4.2 The Preaching of Peter
4.3 Justin Martyr
4.3.1 Justin, 1 Apol. 50.12
4.3.2 Justin, Dial. 106.1
4.3.3 Justin, Dial. 53.5–6
4.3.4 Justin, 1 Apol. 19–21
4.4 Theophilus of Antioch, Autol. 1.13–14
4.5 [Ps.-]Athenagoras of Athens, On the Resurrection
4.6 Irenaeus
4.6.1 Irenaeus, Haer. 5.7.1 and 5.31.2
4.6.2 Irenaeus, Epid. 76
4.7 3 Corinthians
4.8 Tertullian
4.8.1 Tertullian, Apol. 21 and 48–50
4.8.2 Tertullian, Res. 34
4.9 Conclusion
Chapter 5: Doubt and Gnosis
5.1 Doubt as Opportunity in Gnostic Dialogues
5.1.1 The Apocryphon of John
5.1.2 The Gospel of Mary
5.1.3 The Letter of Peter to Philip
5.2 Doubt as Paradigm: Valentinian Readings
5.2.1 Treatise on the Resurrection (a.k.a., Epistle to Rheginos)
5.2.2 Heracleon’s Commentary on John
5.2.3 EXCURSUS: Origen, Fr. Jo. 106
5.2.4 The Tripartite Tractate
5.3 Doubt and Gnostic/Proto-Orthodox Debates
Chapter 6: Further Readings of Luke 24: Responding to Resurrection as phantasia
6.1 Marcion and Tertullian on Luke 24
6.1.1 Introduction
6.1.2 Luke’s Text before Marcion and Marcion as Editor
6.1.3 Marcion’s Docetism and Criticism of Jesus’s Disciples
6.1.4 Marcion and Tertullian on the Resurrection Narratives
6.1.5 Conclusion
6.2 [Ps.-]Justin, Res. 9.6–8
6.2.1 Introduction
6.2.2 The Opponents and Their Docetic Interpretation of Jesus’s Resurrection
6.2.3 [Ps.-]Justin’s Antidocetic Redaction
6.2.4 Conclusion
Chapter 7: The Different Glory (hetera doxa) of Docetism: The “Gospel” of the Acts of John (AJ)
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Source Analysis: Dependence on the Gospels
7.2.1 Dependence on Luke
7.2.2 The Author’s View of the Fourth Gospel
7.3 Re-use of the Resurrection Narratives
7.3.1 AJ 88.9–20: Polymorphy and the Non-recognition Motif in John 21
7.3.2 AJ 90: The Transfiguration of Thomas’s Doubt
7.3.3 AJ 92–93: A Docetic Replacement for Luke 24:36–43(53)?
7.3.4 EXCURSUS: Did 1 John 1:1 Help Inspire the Docetic Christology in AJ 93.1–4?
Chapter 8: Casting out Doubt: The Longer Ending of Mark and the Epistula Apostolorum
8.1 The Longer Ending of Mark and Its Early Reception
8.1.1 The Exorcism of Doubt
8.1.2 Trends in the Reception of the LE among Proto-orthodox Writers
8.1.3 The LE, Polymorphism and Docetic Christology
8.1.4 Conclusion
8.2 The Epistula Apostolorum
8.2.1 Introduction
8.2.2 Dialogue, Dialectic, and Doubt (Ep. Apos. 12–50)
8.2.3 Rewriting the LE of Mark (Ep. Apos. 10.1–11.4)
8.2.4 Rewriting the Group Appearance Narrative (Ep. Apos. 11.2–12.2)
Part III: Rereading the Resurrection Narratives
Chapter 9: The Case Against the Antidocetic Hypothesis
9.1 The Abrupt Appearance
9.1.1 The Abrupt Appearance in the Tradition and in Antidocetic Redaction
9.1.2 The Abrupt Appearance in Luke 24:36
9.1.3 The Abrupt Appearance in John 20:19, 26
9.2 The “Flesh”
9.2.1 The Emphasis on the Flesh in Antidocetic Redaction
9.2.2 The Absence of Sarx in John 20
9.2.3 The Single Occurrence of Sarx in Luke 24:36–49
9.3 The Touch Test
9.3.1 The Touch Test in Antidocetic Redaction
9.3.2 The Touch Motif as Traditional: Preliminary Evidence
9.3.3 The Portrayal of the Touch Test in John’s Narrative
9.3.4 The Portrayal of the Touch Test in Luke’s Narrative
9.4 The Doubt Motif in Luke 24:41
9.4.1 The Reception of the Doubt of the Apostles and Luke 24:41
9.4.2 The Doubt Motif in Lukan Redaction
9.5 The Eating “Proof”
9.5.1 The Eating “Proof” as Traditional Even among Docetists
9.5.2 Luke vs. Antidocetic Writers on the Eating Proof
9.6 Conclusion
Chapter 10: Towards a New Reading of Luke 24 and John 20
10.1 Rereading Luke 24:36–49
10.1.1 The Physical Proofs in Modern Bias
10.1.2 Rereading Luke 24 with the Help of Justin Martyr
10.1.3 Physical vs. Scriptural Proofs in Acts
10.1.4 Physical vs. Scriptural Proofs in Luke: The Doubt Motif, Again
10.1.5 What about the Eating “Proof”?
10.1.6 Conclusion
10.2 Rereading John 20:24–29
10.2.1 The Presupposition of Humanity and the Argument for Divinity
10.2.2 The Thomas Pericope and John’s Conception of Theophany
10.2.3 Theophany of the Pierced God
10.2.4 Conclusion
Chapter 11: Some Final Reflections
11.1 The Resurrection Faith of the Early Church
11.2 The Stigma of Doubt and the Origins of Easter Faith
Appendix: Other Alleged Antidocetic Passages in Luke and John
A.1 Luke
A.1.1 Luke 1–2
A.1.2 Textual Variants in Luke 24:36–53
A.2 John
A.2.1 John 1:14
A.2.2 John 6:51–58
A.2.3 John 20:31
Bibliography
Index of Ancient Sources
Index of Subjects




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