توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب The Righteousness of God: A Lexical Examination of the Covenant-Faithfulness Interpretation (Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen Zum Neuen Testament 2.Reihe)
نام کتاب : The Righteousness of God: A Lexical Examination of the Covenant-Faithfulness Interpretation (Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen Zum Neuen Testament 2.Reihe)
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : عدالت خدا: بررسی لغوی تفسیر عهد-وفاداری (Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen Zum Neuen Testament 2.Reihe)
سری :
نویسندگان : Charles Lee Irons
ناشر : Mohr Siebeck
سال نشر :
تعداد صفحات : 469
ISBN (شابک) : 9783161535185 , 3161535189
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 4 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Cover\nPreface\nTable of Contents\nFigure and Tables\nList of Abbreviations\nModern English Versions of the Bible\nIntroduction\nChapter 1: History of Interpretation of Δικαιοσύνη Θεοῦ in Paul\n A. History of Interpretation up to the Reformation\n 1. The Greek Fathers\n 2. The Latin Fathers\n 3. The Medieval Period\n B. The Reformation Tradition of Interpretation\n 1. The Reformers\n 2. Post-Reformation Protestant Interpretation\n C. The New View and Its Trajectory\n 1. The 19ᵗʰ Century Origins of the New View\n 2. Cremer’s Reception in Old Testament Scholarship\n 3. The 20ᵗʰ Century Gerechtigkeit Gottes Discussion\n 4. English-Speaking Scholarship in the 20ᵗʰ Century\n 5. The New Perspective on Paul\n D. Conclusion\nChapter 2: Methodological Considerations\n A. Lexical Semantics\n 1. Lexical Concepts vs. Discourse Concepts\n 2. Hebrew Parallelism\n B. Septuagint Studies\n 1. Role of LXX in Mediating Hebrew Meanings into Greek\n 2. LXX as a Translation and Calques\n 3. Relevance to the Cremer Theory\n 4. Continuity between Meaning in Extra-Biblical Greek and New Hebraic Meaning\n C. Relevance of Jewish Literature Composed in Greek\n D. Conclusion\nChapter 3: Righteousness in Extra-Biblical Greek\n A. Before the Fifth Century BC\n B. The Fifth Century BC\n C. The Fourth Century BC\n D. Third to First Centuries BC\n E. First to Second Centuries AD\n F. Conclusion\nChapter 4: Righteousness in the Old Testament\n A. צְדׇקׇה/צֶדֶק in the Hebrew Old Testament\n 1. The Differences Between the Two Nouns\n 2. Their Semantic Range\n 3. Semantic Domain Analysis\n B. Δικαιοσύνη in the Septuagint (Excluding the Apocrypha)\n C. Analysis of Arguments for the Relational Interpretation\n 1. Righteousness as “Thoroughly Positive”\n 2. The Appeal to Hebrew Parallelism\n a. Theoretical Observations on Hebrew Parallelism\n b. “Righteousness” and “Salvation” in Parallel\n c. “Righteousness” and “Faithfulness” in Parallel\n d. “Righteousness” in Parallel with a Variety of Other Terms\n 3. The LXX’s Use of Δικαιοσύνη to Render חֶסֶד\n 4. Criticism of the Norm-Idea\n 5. Antithesis Between “the Righteous” and “the Wicked”\n 6. “May They Not Come Into Your Righteousness” (Psalm 69:27)\n 7. Judah and Tamar: “She is More Righteous than I” (Genesis 38:26)\n D. The Righteousness of God in the Old Testament\n 1. Psalm 7:17\n 2. Psalm 35:23–28\n 3. Psalm 51:14\n 4. Psalm 98:1–3\n 5. Psalm 143:1–2, 11–12\n 6. Psalm 7:7–9\n E. Conclusion\nChapter 5: Righteousness in Jewish Literature\n A. The Dead Sea Scrolls\n B. Apocrypha and OT Pseudepigrapha Composed in Hebrew\n 1. Tobit\n 2. Sirach\n 3. Baruch\n 4. 1 Maccabees\n 5. Jubilees\n 6. 1 Enoch\n 7. Psalms of Solomon\n 8. Liber Antiquitatum Biblicarum\n 9. 4 Ezra\n 10. Life of Adam and Eve\n C. Aprocrypha, OT Pseudepigrapha, and Other Hellenistic Jewish Writings Composed in Greek\n 1. Wisdom of Solomon\n 2. 4 Maccabees\n 3. Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs\n 4. Testament of Job\n 5. Paraleipomena of Jeremiah (= 4 Baruch)\n 6. Letter of Aristeas\n 7. The Sibylline Oracles\n 8. The Sentences of Pseudo-Phocylides\n 9. Philo\n 10. Josephus\n D. The New Testament\n 1. Overview\n 2. Δικαιοσύνη in Matthew\n 3. The Three Occurrences of Δικαιοσύνη Θεοῦ Outside of Paul\n a. Matthew 6:33\n b. James 1:20\n c. 2 Peter 1:1\n E. Conclusion\nChapter 6: Exegesis of Δικαιοσύνη Θεοῦ in Paul\n A. Δικαιοσύνη Θεοῦ as “God’s Covenant Faithfulness”\n 1. Romans 3:1–8\n 2. Romans 3:21–26\n 3. 2 Corinthians 5:21\n 4. Other Greek Words for “Faithfulness”\n B. Δικαιοσύνη Θεοῦ as “God’s Saving Activity or Power”\n 1. Δύναμις Θεοῦ and Ὀργὴ Θεοῦ as Subjective Genitives\n 2. Intertextual Allusions to the OT\n a. Psalm 143\n b. Psalm 98\n C. Δικαιοσύνη Θεοῦ as “Gift of Righteousness from God”\n 1. Δικαιοσύνη as Righteousness before God\n 2. Θεοῦ as Genitive of Source or Genetivus Auctoris\n 3. “By Faith” and Other Näherbestimmungen\n a. Romans 1:17\n b. Romans 3:5\n c. Romans 3:21–22\n d. Romans 3:25–26\n e. Romans 10:3\n f. 2 Corinthians 5:21\n g. Philippians 3:9\n 4. The Πίστις Χριστοῦ Debate\n 5. The Parallels Between Phil 3:9 and Rom 10:3\n D. Conclusion\nChapter 7: Synopsis and Implications\n A. Synopsis of the Argument\n B. Implications for Paul’s Doctrine of Justification\nAppendix: All Occurrences of “Righteousness” in the Old Testament\n Section 1. צֶדֶק (masc.) in the OT\n I. LEGAL RIGHTEOUSNESS (49)\n I.A. With verbs of judging or ruling (15)\n I.A.1 Human judges or kings (including Messiah) as subject (10)\n I.A.2 God as subject (5)\n I.B. Justice (19)\n I.B.1 Human (including Messianic) justice (9)\n I.B.2 Divine justice (10)\n I.C. The righteousness of God (“my, his, your righteousness”) (7)\n I.D. Vindication (5)\n I.E. Clothed with righteousness (3)\n II. ETHICAL RIGHTEOUSNESS (41)\n II.A. General (12)\n II.B. With verbs of doing (3)\n II.C. Righteous laws, word (10)\n II.D. Gates, paths, cities, etc. of righteousness (7)\n II.E. Righteousness before God (9)\n III. CORRECTNESS (21)\n III.A. Speaking righteousness, telling the truth (6)\n III.B. Just balances, weights (10)\n III.C. Doing something correctly (5)\n IV. DIFFICULT CASES (8)\n Section 2. צְדׇקׇה (fem.) in the OT\n I. LEGAL RIGHTEOUSNESS\n A. With עׇשׇׂה “to execute justice” (12)\n I.A.1 Human judges or kings (including Messiah) as subject (9)\n I.A.2 God as subject (3)\n B. Justice (19)\n I.B.1 Human (including Messianic) justice (9)\n I.B.2 Divine justice (10)\n C. The righteousness of God (“my, his, your righteousness”) (34)\n I.D. Vindication (4)\n I.E. Clothed with righteousness (2)\n I.F. Right(s) (3)\n II. ETHICAL RIGHTEOUSNESS\n II.A. General (43)\n II.B. With verbs of doing (15)\n II.C. Righteous laws, word (0)\n II.D. Gates, paths, cities, oaks, habitation of righteousness (0)\n II.E. Righteousness as a status before God (14)\n II.F. Honesty (1)\n III. CORRECTNESS\n III.A. Speaking/swearing in righteousness, telling the truth (4)\n III.B. Just balances, weights (0)\n III.C. Doing something correctly (1)\n IV. DIFFICULT CASES (5)\n V. PLURAL (14x)\n God’s righteous acts (5x)\n Man’s righteous deeds (ethical uprightness) (7x)\n Vindication/justification (2x)\nBibliography\n Primary Sources\n Secondary Sources\nIndex of Ancient Sources\n A. Hebrew Bible and Septuagint\n B. New Testament\n C. Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha\n D. Philo\n E. Josephus\n F. Qumran\n G. Greek and Latin Literary Sources\n H. Early Christian Literature\n I. Rabbinic Literature\nIndex of Authors\nIndex of Subjects