The prophets agree : the function of the book of the twelve prophets in acts / por Aaron W. White
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Item type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Monografía | Biblioteca Diocesana de Córdoba BDC-San Juan Pablo II | Fondo moderno | BDJP 22.07(05)BIS 184 (Browse shelf) | Available | 900066124 |
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BDJP 22.07(05)BIS 179 A king and a fool? : the succession narrative as a satire / | BDJP 22.07(05)BIS 180 The Lukan lens on wealth and possessions : a perspective shaped by the themes of reversal and right response / | BDJP 22.07(05)BIS 183 He is a glutton and a drunkard : deviant consumption in the Hebrew Bible / | BDJP 22.07(05)BIS 184 The prophets agree : the function of the book of the twelve prophets in acts / | BDJP 22.07(05)BIS 185 Interactions in interpretation : the pilgrimage of meaning through biblical texts and contexts / | BDJP 22.07(05)BIS 186 The epistles for all Christians : epistolary literature, circulation, and the gospels for all Christians / | BDJP 22.07(05)BIS 187 Dialogue on monarchy in the Gideon-Abimelech narrative : ideological reading in light of Bakhtin's dialogism / |
Incluye referencias bibliográficas (p. [228]-242) e índices (p. [243]-259)
Contiene: Acknowledgments -- Abbreviations -- Introduction: A Case for a Study on the LXX-Twelve Prophets in Acts -- I Flourishing Bones: an Introduction to a Study of the LXX-Twelve Prophets in Acts -- I Previous Work on the TP in Acts and Models of Interpretation -- I A New Study on the TP in Acts -- V The Argument and the Direction of the Study -- 1 (3z(BI Will Pour Out My Spirit(3y:(B Jesus the Lord and the Lukan Reading of LXX-Joel 3:1–5 in Acts 2 -- The Text of LXX-Joel 3:1–5 and of Acts 2:17–21 -- I Introduction -- I (3z(BI will pour out My Spirit(3y:(B LXX-Joel 3:1–5 -- I LXX-Joel 3:1–5 in Acts 2: God's Attestation of the Lord and His Witnesses -- V Joel 3:1–5 in The Testament of Judah 24 -- V Luke and The Testament of Judah 24: a Conversation among Readers -- 2 (3z(BForty Years(3y:(B the Divided People of God and the Lukan Reading of LXX-Amos 5:25–27 in Acts 7:42–43 -- The Text of LXX-Amos 5:25–27 and of Acts 7:42–43 -- I Introduction -- I (3z(BForty Years(3y:(B Amos 5:25–27 as a Look Back to the Exodus -- I Amos 5:25–27 in Acts 7:42–43 -- V Amos in the Damascus Document: CD-A 7:13–8:1 -- V Amos 5:25–27 in CD-A and Acts 7: Reading Amos 5 in Community -- 3 (3z(BI am Doing a Work(3y:(B the Gentiles as God's People and the Lukan Reading of LXX-Habakkuk 1:5 in Acts 13 -- The Text of LXX-Habakkuk 1:5 and of Acts 13:41 -- I Introduction -- I Habakkuk: the Announcement of an Amazing Judgment -- I The Work of God: the Role of Habakkuk 1:5 in Acts 13 -- V (3z(BThe Traitors in the Latter Days(3y:(B the Reading of Hab. 1:5 by 1QpHab 1.16–2.10 -- V Habakkuk 1:5 in 1QpHab and Acts 13: a Conversation among Readers -- 4 (3z(BAll the Gentiles Who Are Called(3y:(B Sending the Gentiles Mission and the Lukan Reading of LXX-Amos 9:11–12 in Acts 15 -- The Text of LXX-Amos 9:11–12 and of Amos 15:16–18 -- I Introduction -- I LXX-Amos 9:11–12: a Rebuilt Davidic Reign in the Eschatological Future -- I LXX-Amos 9:11–12 in Acts 15: Gentile as Gentile -- V Amos 9:11 in 4Q Florilegium Frgs. 1–2 and 21, 1 -- V Luke and 4QFlor: a Discussion among Readers of Amos 9:11 (and 12) -- Conclusion: Reading the Greek Book-of-the-Twelve-Prophets in Acts -- I What Was This Study About? -- I Luke and His Co-readers -- I How Each Quotation Built towards One Argument -- V What If the Greek Twelve-Prophets Were Not in Acts? -- Appendix -- Selected Texts -- Works Cited --
How Luke uses and interprets Scripture continues to captivate many. In his new work The Prophets Agree, a title inspired by James' words at the Jerusalem Council, Aaron W. White turns over one rock that has remained unturned. Interpretation of the four quotations of the Minor Prophets in Acts frequently isolates each citation from the other. However, this full-length study of the place of the Minor Prophets in Acts asks what difference it makes to regard these four quotations as a singular contribution to Acts from a unified source. By an in-depth study of each quotation, an innovative method of intertextuality, and an eye to the overall agenda of Acts, White proves the importance of reading the Twelve Prophets in unity when it is quoted in Acts, and the integral role it plays in the redemptive-historical plot line of Acts
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