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Titre : | Theology of the New Testament. Volume 2 : The Variety and Unity of the Apostolic Witness to Christ |
Auteurs : | Leonhard Goppelt, Auteur ; Jürgen Roloff, Éditeur scientifique ; John E. Alsup, Traducteur |
Type de document : | texte imprimé |
Editeur : | Grand Rapids [USA] : William B. Eerdmans, 1982 |
ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-0-8028-2385-4 |
Format : | xx + 348 p. |
Note générale : | Titre original: Theologie des neuen Testaments (1976) |
Langues: | Anglais |
Langues originales: | Allemand |
Index. décimale : | CN/A (Théologie du Nouveau Testament) |
Note de contenu : |
- Editor’s (Revised) Foreword
- Translator’s Foreword - Abbreviations PART TWO: THE PRIMITIVE CHRISTIAN COMMUNITY (The Church within Israel) - § 24. The Sources and Their Evaluation: 1. The Sources 2. The Line of Questioning of the Sources and of Their Presentation - § 25. Following Jesus in Discipleship as the Church: 1. The Missionary Witness 2. Baptism 3. The Ekklēsia 4. The New Service of Worship alongside the Old 5. The Altered Missionary Situation and the Beginnings of Gentile Christianity Free from the Law - § 26. The Beginnings of Christology: 1. The Relationship to the Preaching of Jesus 2. The Starting Point of Christology 3. The Servant of God 4. The Resurrection as the Exaltation to Messianic Ruler 5. Maranatha! 6. Regarding the Structure of Early Christological Statements PART THREE: PAUL AND HELLENISTIC CHRISTIANITY - Introduction - § 27. The Problem of Hellenistic Christianity: 1. On the Discussion 2. The Structure of Hellenistic Christianity 3. Consequences for the Representation of New Testament Theology CHAPTER I: The Presuppositions of Pauline Theology - § 28. The Course of Paul’s Life and Christian Traditions: 1. Preliminary Observation: The Sources 2. His Life and Pilgrimage 3. The Communication of the Gospel to Paul 4. Paul and Jesus 5. The Jesus Tradition and Paul’s Hermeneutical Method - § 29. The Christ Event and the Interpretive Aids of the Religious Environment: 1. Old Testament/Jewish Apocalypticism 2. Hellenistic Syncretism 3. The Old Testament - § 30. The Christ Event and the Old Testament according to Paul: 1. The Fundamental Recognition of the Old Testament Canon 2. The Formal Hermeneutic 3. The Hermeneutical Starting Point and Its Problematic 4. Hermeneutical Principles 5. Scripture Interpretation as Interpretive Vehicle 6. Christ and History - § 31. The Arrangement of Pauline Theology CHAPTER II: Jesus Christ (Christology) - § 32. The Line of Questioning: 1. The History-of-Tradition Structure of Paul’s Christological Statements 2. Alterations in Comparison to the Primitive Church of Palestine 3. The Name “Jesus Christ” - § 33. The Son of God: 1. The Hellenistic Scope of Understanding 2. The Designation “Son of God”: Overview of Usage 3. The Inception of the Son’s Activity 4. The Emergence of the Preexistence Affirmation 5. The Sending and Incarnation of the Preexistent Son 6. The Preexistent One as the Agent of Creation 7. The Enduring Significance of the Affirmations about Preexistence 8. The Essence of Sonship - § 34. The Kyrios: 1. The Kyrios-Confession of the Hellenistic Church 2. The Origin and Content of the Hellenistic Kyrios-Concept 3. The Function of the Kyrios for the Community - § 35. The Course of Christ’s Life as Saving Revelation: The Cross: 1. Christ’s Life as a Whole 2. The Cross: Terminology 3. The hyper-Formula 4. The Development of the hyper-Formula 5. Being with Christ (syn Christo) and Baptism 6. “In Christ" CHAPTER III: The Continued Ministry of Jesus - § 36. The Event of Proclamation (the Gospel): 1. Introduction: The Problematic 2. The Terminology of Proclamation: Statistical Breakdown 3. “Gospel” as a Religious Term prior to Paul 4. “Gospel” in Paul 5. Proclamation through Acts - § 37. The Work of the Spirit: 1. Regarding History-of-Religion Analysis 2. The Experience of the Spirit in Paul 3. The Interpretation of the Experience of the Spirit - § 38. Faith: 1. The Development of the Concept of Faith in Primitive Christianity 2. The Content and Essence of Faith 3. The Emergence of Faith 4. Faith in the Context of Parenesis CHAPTER IV: The Saving Effect of the Christ Event The Gospel as the Revelation of God’s Righteousness - § 39. Justification and Reconciliation: 1. Regarding Terminology 2. The Different Aspects of Salvation’s Effect 3. Justification and Reconciliation as Specific Pauline Terms 4. Justification in Pauline Theology as a Whole CHAPTER V: The Emergence of the Gospel as Visible Form in the Church - § 40. The Church: 1. The Starting Point 2. The Identifying Marks of the Church 3. The Church as the Eschatological People of God 4. The Church as the Body of Christ (sôma Christou) - §41. The Lord’s Supper: 1. The Lord’s Supper Celebration of the Pauline Communities 2. Paul’s Interpretation of the Lord’s Supper PART FOUR: The Theology of the Post-Pauline Writings - Introduction - § 42. The Apostolic Period Draws to a Close: 1. The Situation at Its Close 2. The Theological and Historical Problematic of the Closing Apostolic Period 3. An Attempt at Determining the Post-Pauline Period 4. Theological Groupings and Literary Forms of the Post-Pauline Period CHAPTER I: Christians in Society - § 43. The Responsibility of Christians in Society according to the First Epistle of Peter: 1. Preliminary Consideration: Compositional Circumstances 2. The Essence of Being a Christian in Society 3. Responsible Conduct in the Institutions of Society 4. The Theology of Suffering 5. Christology - § 44. Christians in the Post-Christian Society of the End Time according to the Book of Revelation: 1. Preliminary Consideration: Compositional Circumstances, Content, and Interpretive Problematic 2. God and History 3. The Exaltation of Christ as the Turning Point of History 4. The Gospel and the Nations of the World 5. Political Anti-Christianity and the True Disciples (Rev. 13) 6. The Essential Characteristics of History’s Climax (Rev. 6:11 and 15:19) 7. The Consummation 8. Starting Point and Problematic of End-Time Eschatology 9. Revelation and I Peter: Two Dimensions CHAPTER II: The Proclamation of the Epistle of James and of Matthew in the Church of Syria - § 45. The Epistle of James—A Parenetic Theology of Empiricism: 1. Preliminary Consideration: Compositional Circumstances and Interpretive Problematicv2. The “Perfect Law of Liberty” 3. Faith and Works—The Program of a Theology of Empiricism - § 46. The Interpretation of Jesus’ Life and Ministry through Matthew: 1. The Situation 2. The Kerygmatic Goal in the Judgment of Scholarly Research 3. The Salvation-Historical Design 4. The Messiahship of Jesus 5. The Fulfillment of the Law 6. The Replacement of Israel by the Church CHAPTER III: The Long Path of the Church in History: The Theology of the Epistle to the Hebrews and of Luke - § 47. The Community on a Journey—Christ, the Perfect High Priest (the Epistle of the Hebrews): 1. Preliminary Consideration: Origin and Composition 2. The Use and Understanding of Scriptures 3. The Theological Position 4. The High Priest Christology 5. Parenesis 6. The Epistle to the Hebrews and Luke - § 48. Luke—The Theologian of Salvation History : 1. Introduction: Compositional Relationships, Literary Distinctiveness, and Theological Problematic 2. The Lukan Conception of Salvation History 3. The Distinctiveness of Lukan Christology 4. Jesus—Israel—The Church CHAPTER IV: The Presence of the Eschaton in the Self-Revelation of the Logos Become Flesh (the First Epistle of John and the Gospel of John) - § 49. The Structure of Johannine Theology: 1. Anonymity 2. The New Language 3. The ego-eimi Formulas 4. Jesus—the Logos Become Flesh 5. The Lord’s Supper 6. The Distinctiveness of Johannine Eschatology - The Publications of Leonhard Goppelt - Literature Supplement - Index of Passages to Volume II - Subject Index to Volumes I and II |
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Code-barres | Cote | Support | Localisation | Section | Disponibilité |
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CN/A 021b | CN/A 021b | Livre | Bibliothèque principale | Livres empruntables | Prêt possible Disponible |