The epistles for all Christians : epistolary literature, circulation, and the gospels for all Christians / por David A. Smith.

By: Smith, David A, 1967- [autor.]Material type: TextTextSeries: Biblical interpretation series ; 186Publisher: Leiden ; Boston : Brill. 2020Description: VI, 172 p. ; 25 cmISBN: 9789004440203Subject(s): Biblia. N.T. Epístolas -- Crítica, interpretación, etc | Biblia -- Colecciones -- ComentariosUDC: 22.07(05) | 227 Summary: "In The Epistles for All Christians David Smith argues that epistolary literature offers analogous evidence of circulation to the Gospels. Since Richard Bauckham's edited volume The Gospels for All Christians was published in 1998, debate over the validity of the contributors' claims that the Gospels were written for "all Christians" has revolved around interpretation. Smith brings circulation to bear on the conversation. Studying ancient media practices of publication and circulation and using social network theory, Smith makes a compelling case that if the evangelists did not expect their texts to circulate they would be atypical. It would be incumbent upon any scholar who disagrees to make a case that an evangelist expected his text was for his local community"-- Provided by publisher.
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Item type Current location Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Monografía Biblioteca Diocesana de Córdoba
BDC-San Juan Pablo II
Fondo moderno BDJP 22.07(05)BIS 186 (Browse shelf) Available 900066126

Incluye referencias bibliográficas (p. [145]-164) e índices (p. [165]-172)

"In The Epistles for All Christians David Smith argues that epistolary literature offers analogous evidence of circulation to the Gospels. Since Richard Bauckham's edited volume The Gospels for All Christians was published in 1998, debate over the validity of the contributors' claims that the Gospels were written for "all Christians" has revolved around interpretation. Smith brings circulation to bear on the conversation. Studying ancient media practices of publication and circulation and using social network theory, Smith makes a compelling case that if the evangelists did not expect their texts to circulate they would be atypical. It would be incumbent upon any scholar who disagrees to make a case that an evangelist expected his text was for his local community"-- Provided by publisher.

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