The Study of the New Testament : : A Comprehensive Introduction / / Antonio Piñero [and three others].

The most thorough grounding available in the various disciplines of NT study, this is an invaluable tool for students, scholars and other serious readers of the earliest Christian writings. With a full survey of scholarship on each topic, in 600 packed pages the volume gives a reliable, in-depth pre...

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Superior document:Tools for Biblical Study Series ; Volume 3
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Place / Publishing House:Leiderdorp, The Netherlands : : Deo Publishing,, 2003.
©1995
Year of Publication:2003
Edition:First edition.
Language:English
Series:Tools for biblical study ; Volume 3.
Physical Description:1 online resource
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245 1 4 |a The Study of the New Testament :  |b A Comprehensive Introduction /  |c Antonio Piñero [and three others]. 
250 |a First edition. 
264 1 |a Leiderdorp, The Netherlands :  |b Deo Publishing,  |c 2003. 
264 4 |c ©1995 
300 |a 1 online resource 
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490 1 |a Tools for Biblical Study Series ;  |v Volume 3 
520 |a The most thorough grounding available in the various disciplines of NT study, this is an invaluable tool for students, scholars and other serious readers of the earliest Christian writings. With a full survey of scholarship on each topic, in 600 packed pages the volume gives a reliable, in-depth presentation of: the history of interpretation – the NT canon – text criticism – the language of the NT – the historical and literary context – methods and approaches. 
588 |a Description based on print version record. 
505 0 |a Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- Preface -- Publisher's Preface to the English edition -- Abbreviations -- INTRODUCTION -- Ancient languages and the study of the New Testament -- Biblical Philology and Theology -- CHAPTER 1 THE HISTORY OF NEW TESTAMENT INTERPRETATION -- From the Beginnings to the Modern Period -- The early days of New Testament interpretation -- Interpretation in the post-apostolic period -- The school of Alexandria and Antioch, face to face -- The fifth century -- From the Middle Ages to the Renaissance -- The Reformation -- Beyond the Reformation: scholasticism, pietism and rationalism -- The beginnings of textual criticism and religious criticism -- The Modern Period -- Historical criticism -- The critical study of the Gospels -- The authorship of the books of the New Testament -- The search for the Jesus of history -- Biblical theology and exegesis in historicist perspective -- The Tübingen School -- Reaction to the Tübingen School: the consolidation of the historical-critical method -- Text criticism of the New Testament -- The history of the canon -- Predecessors of the history of religions school -- The language of the New Testament and its linguistic environment -- The influence of popular hellenistic religion on the New Testament -- Radical historical criticism -- Progress in textual and literary criticism in the twentieth century -- Form criticism -- Redaction criticism -- Rabbinic literature -- Targum and Midrash -- Qumran -- Nag Hammadi -- Old Testament Apocrypha -- Mandaean and Iranian Texts -- Lexicography -- Structuralism and the New Testament: from formalist analysis to semiotics -- Sociology and the New Testament -- New horizons -- CHAPTER 2 THE STUDY OF THE TEXT OF THE NEW TESTAMENT -- The Canon of the New Testatnent. 
505 8 |a The formation of the canon: "normative" authorities and the early Church -- The list or canon -- The beginnings of the criticism of the canon -- Catholic and Protestant attitudes to the "closing" of the canon -- Text Criticistn and the History of the New Testatnent Text -- The objectives of textual criticism. The state of research -- Classification of the manuscripts -- The witnesses to the New Testament text -- Different text types -- (a) The Alexandrian type -- (b) The Western type -- (c) The Koiné or Byzantine (or Syrian) type -- (d) The "Caesarean" type -- The ancient versions -- 1. The Syriac versions -- (a) Tatian's Diatessaron and the Old Syriac -- (b) The Peshitta (syr) -- (c) The Philonexian Syriac version (sy) -- (d) The Harklean Syriac version (sy) -- (e) The Syro-Palestinian version (syr) -- Limitations of the Syriac versions -- 2. The Latin versions -- (a) The Old Latin (Vetus latina) -- (b) The Vulgate -- 3. The Coptic versions -- 4. Other versions -- Scripture quoted by the Church Fathers -- Methodological principles of text criticism -- Text-critical research, present and future -- Current directions in New Testament textual criticism -- Appendix: Printed editions of the New Testament -- CHAPTER 3 THE LANGUAGE OF THE NEW TESTAMENT -- A. The Languages Spoken in Palestine at the Time of Jesus -- 1. Aramaic -- Aramaisms and "translation Greek" or "judeo-Greek -- Ipsissima verba et facta Jesu -- (a) The criterion of dissimilarity or discontinuity -- (b) The criterion of multiple attestation -- (c) The criterion of coherence or continuity -- (d) The criteria of language and context -- 2. Hebrew -- Hebraists and purists -- 3. Greek -- 4. Latin -- B. Koiné and the New Testament -- 1. The name and concept of koiné -- 2. The origin of koiné -- 3. Defining periods of koiné -- 4. Distinctive features of koiné. 
505 8 |a (a) Phonology / phonetics and prosody -- Punctuation -- Accentuation -- (b) Morphology -- (c) Syntax -- α) Case syntax -- β) Verbal syntax -- Tenses -- The perfect -- The future -- Moods -- The optative -- Voices -- Active voice and middle voice -- The nominal forms of the verb -- The participle -- The infinitive -- Verbal aspect -- Aspect and its definition -- Factors affecting aspect -- γ) Sentence syntax -- δ) Prepositions and particles -- C. Other Linguistic Influences -- 1. NT Greek and Semitisms -- 2. NT Greek and Septuagintalisms -- 3. NT Greek, Latinisms and other linguistic borrowings -- 4. The nature of NT Greek -- 5. The study of the language of the New Testament in the light of current linguistics -- CHAPTER 4 THE HISTORICAL-LITERARY CONTEXT (Study of the substratum of the New Testament) -- 1. The New Testament World -- 2. Foreign Influences: Indo-Iranian Region -- 3. The Heritage of the Hebrew Bible -- The NT use of the Old Testament. the "Testimonia -- The "Testimonia" as a source of inspiration for the NT -- (a) Combined (erroneously?) quotations from the OT -- (b) The "formula" quotations in Matthew -- (c) Quotations diverging from the basic text (LXX/MT / others) -- (d) Composite quotations -- 4. The New Testament and Qumran Literature -- Identifying the Qumran sect -- The relationship between Qumran and the NT -- (a) John the Baptist -- (b) Jesus -- (c) The structure of the community -- (d) The Pauline corpus -- (e) Johannine ideology -- (f) The Epistle to the Hebrews -- (g) NT fragments at Qumran? -- Tools for the study of Qumran literature -- 5. Judeo-Hellenistic Literature -- The Old Testament pseudepigrapha -- Pseudonymous literature -- Date of composition -- The importance of the intertestamental literature -- The principal theologoumena of apocryphal literature -- (a) The transcendent God -- (b) The loving and merciful God. 
505 8 |a (c) The just or righteous God -- (d) Angelology -- (e) Dualism, pessimism -- (f) The kingdom of God, eschatology and messianism -- Apocalyptic elements in the NT -- 6. Philo of Alexandria and Flavius Josephus -- Philo -- Flavius Josephus -- 7. The New Testament and Rabbinie Literature -- Midrash, Targum, Mishnah and Talmud -- History of the use of this corpus for the understanding of the NT -- Guidelines for NT study in the light of rabbinic literature -- Targum, Derash and the New Testament -- The use of the targumim -- Derashic exegesis -- Objectives of derashic exegesis -- Principles of derashic exegesis -- Procedures of derashic exegesis -- Literary forms -- Characteristics of derashic exegesis in the NT -- Principal studies of "derashic" techniques and the NT -- An example of targumic method applied to the NT -- Examples of the NT writers' use of the derashic method -- 8. Gnosis, Gnosticism and the New Testament -- Terminology -- General features of gnosis -- Gnostic theology -- Origin of gnostic religiosity -- Impulses and motives for the constitution of gnosis as a system -- Gnosis and the New Testament -- 9. The New Testament and Hellenistic Culture -- The universalist tendency -- Use of categories proper to hellenism -- Jesus as Kyrios (ϰύριoς) -- Jesus as Saviour (σωτήρ) -- Jesus as Son of God (υἱὸς ϑɛoῦ) -- Jesus as the Logos made manifest (λόγος) -- Spirit (pneuma) and the concept of prophecy -- Mystical life -- Baptism -- Eucharist -- Church order -- Popular hellenistic philosophy and Christian ethics -- CHAPTER 5 METHODS AND APPROACHES IN NEW TESTAMENT STUDY: DIACHRONIC AND SYNCHRONIC -- I. DIACHRONIC STUDY OF THE NEW TESTAMENT -- 1. The New Testament in the Framework of the History of Religions (Religionsgeschichte) -- 2. Historical-critical Methods -- Scholarly attitudes prior to historical criticism. 
505 8 |a Objective of historical-critical methods -- Literary Criticism/ Source Criticism -- The concept of literary criticism -- The development of literary criticism in the biblical field -- The literary genres of the NT -- The "Gospel" genre -- Letters/ Epistles -- Historical monographs -- Apocalypse -- The fields of NT literary criticism -- (A) Literary criticism between the Gospels -- (a) Two or more traditions of the same event or logion -- (1) Internal witnesses -- (2) External witnesses -- (b) Single traditions -- The two-source theory -- The Q source -- (B) Literary criticism outside the Gospels -- (a) Literary relationships between different writings -- 2 Peter-Jude -- Ephesians-Colossians -- (b) Literary relationships within a single writing -- Literary criticism as history of literature -- Form History/ Form Criticism -- Concept -- Genre, form, and formula -- Presuppositions of form criticism -- Methodological procedure in form criticism -- (a) Determination of the literary genres -- (b) Analysis of genres -- (c) History of each genre -- (d) Determination of the "Sitz im Leben" or life setting -- (e) Reconstruction of the history of the tradition -- History of research -- Reaction to the form-critical method -- Redaction History/ Redaction Criticism -- Concept -- The genesis of redaction history -- The goal of redaction history -- The methodology of redaction criticism -- A brief history of redaction criticism of the Gospels and Acts -- Predecessors -- The first Gospel -- The Gospel of Mark -- The Gospel of Luke -- The Acts of the Apostles -- The synoptics as a whole -- 3. Sociological Methods and the New Testament -- Antecedents of the sociological method in the study of the NT -- Interest and difficulties of the sociological approach -- History and sociology -- Different types of sociological exegesis -- (a) Sociological exegesis. 
505 8 |a (b) Socio-historical exegesis. 
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