Spelling suggestions: "subject:"[een] OLD TESTAMENT"" "subject:"[enn] OLD TESTAMENT""
91 |
Eternal Jerusalem: Jerusalem/Zion in Biblical Theology with Special Attention to "New Jerusalem" as the Name for the Final State in Revelation 21-22.Dow, Lois Katharine January 2008 (has links)
The thesis of this dissertation is that the picture of the New Jerusalem in Revelation draws upon
antecedent Jerusalem/Zion theology to provide a meaningful depiction of the final state of believers in
Jesus as both communion with God and life as a community. <p> This biblical theological study uses a canonical approach that includes an examination of extra-biblical Second Temple literature as an aid to accessing NT understandings of OT texts. Previous studies of Jerusalem do not cover the entire canon, focus on historical or literary issues rather than theology, or access only OT texts clearly alluded to in Rev 21-22 rather than the entire theological tradition about Jerusalem, which culminates in the "New" Jerusalem</p> <p> The Pentateuch foresees Jerusalem's role as place of contact between God and Israel. In the Historical Books, David completes the conquest of Canaan by taking Jerusalem and establishing YHWH's cult there. But because of the sin of the kings and people God abandons the city for a time. Jerusalem after the return from exile is still less than ideal. In the Psalms, Jerusalem is depicted as God's inviolable holy mountain. The prophets proclaim punishment for sinful Jerusalem but future restoration to the kind of ideal state described in the Psalms. Jerusalem/Zion can be seen as the ultimate goal of both the First and Second Exoduses. </p> <p> Non-canonical Second Temple literature emphasizes the pre-Davidic role of Zion as place of God's contact with humanity. The Babylonians could not have taken the city without God's co-operation, and even then, the Temple furnishings were secretly preserved. Zion's cosmic importance and eschatological role are often emphasized, with emergence of belief in a heavenly Jerusalem.</p> <p> eschatological role are often emphasized, with emergence of belief in a heavenly Jerusalem. In the New Testament, earthly Jerusalem rejects the Messiah, and so forfeits its role as link to glorious eschatological Jerusalem. Old Testament prophecies of renewal are instead fulfilled in the resurrection of Jesus, emergence of the church, and ultimately the New Jerusalem.</p> <p> of deep intimacy with God, community among all believers, intense experience of life, and
complete eternal safety from sin and evil. This was God's plan since creation. Jerusalem as the goal and focus of God's people on their journey towards him in the Old Testament foreshadows the New Jerusalem as their destination at the end of the age.</p> <p> The dissertation closes with suggestions for practical application and further study.</p> / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
|
92 |
Herder: (Biblical) Poetry & PhilosophyMurray, Marc-Andre William 04 January 2024 (has links)
The goal of this thesis is to elaborate the place of J.G. Herder’s concept of poetry within his philosophy. Through a discussion of his study of the Old Testament, On the Spirit of Hebrew Poetry, I examine the relationship between J.G. Herder’s poetics and his naturalism. Herder’s hermeneutic, developed in the context of his literary criticism, is at the heart of his philosophy. I interpret Herder’s views on poetry as an integral part of his criticism of 17th century rationalism, and one that he develops in union with the conclusions he draws from philosophy and the natural sciences.
|
93 |
The Messiah and the Outpouring of the Holy Spirit: The Christological Significance of Jesus' Role as the Giver of the Spirit in Luke-ActsGodshall, Matthew 30 December 2013 (has links)
Without rejecting the general consensus among scholars that Luke emphasizes the humanity of Jesus, this dissertation attempts to contribute to the field of Lukan Christology by contending that there is more to the Lukan portrait of Jesus than what is generally acknowledged. Through his particular presentation of Jesus as the Spirit-Giver, Luke unveils the divine identity of the Messiah.
Chapter 1 provides a history of research of Lukan Christology and highlights the various controlling categories scholars have proposed for analyzing Lukan Christology. It concludes that there is a need for a study on Luke's Spirit-giver motif and its contribution to Lukan Christology.
Because the OT provides the conceptual world from which Luke develops his Spirit-Giver motif, chapter 2 examines the eschatological passages in Ezekiel, Isaiah, Joel, and Zechariah to see how that act of giving the Spirit is linked with the unique identity of Yahweh. The primary claim in this chapter is that the OT consistently presents the act of giving the eschatological Spirit as an act unique to the divine identity of Yahweh. This claim is supported in three ways: first, the primary metaphors employed to describe the giving of the Spirit are new creation and new exodus; second, the prophets explicitly link the act of giving the Spirit with Yahweh's identity as Israel's God; third, the act of giving the Spirit is reserved for Yahweh alone.
Chapter 3 explores how the act of giving the eschatological Spirit was understood in Second Temple and Rabbinic Judaism. This chapter highlights the continuity between the OT and Jewish literature: the act of giving the Spirit is linked with God's identity as the creator and redeemer. Despite its diversity, early Judaism associated the act of giving the Spirit with the unique identity of God and no other figure is ever presented as sharing this role.
Chapters 4 and 5 examine Luke's Gospel and Acts respectively in the attempt to understand how Luke himself has uniquely developed the Spirit-Giver motif. In drawing upon the OT promise of the outpouring of the Spirit, Luke presents Jesus as participating in a role that was reserved exclusively for Yahweh and unique to his identity as Israel's creator and covenant God. As the Spirit-Giver theme unfolds, the identity of Jesus and the Father overlap in their shared role as the Spirit-Giver. This theme is thus evidence of Lukan divine identity Christology.
Chapter 6 concludes the argument and explores implications for Lukan Christology.
|
94 |
Bakens van die Ou Testamentiese Kanonontwikkeling binne die eerste vyf eeue van die ChristendomPretorius, Wilhelm 30 June 2008 (has links)
The dissertation identifies the beacons of canon development during the first five hundred years of
Christianity. These beacons are processes, events and certain persons from general as well as
dogmatic history, which played a formative role in canon development. The beacons are placed
within the historical, geographical and theological milieu, in which it took place. It especially
emphasises the role of human conduct and decisions in the process of canon development. It
provides a background of the development of a complex Judaism as the origin of Christianity, and
demonstrates the continuous impact of Judaism on Christian canon development. The differences
presented between these two independent religions are also mentioned. / Systematic Theology & Theological Ethics / M. Th. (Systematic Theology & Theological Ethics)
|
95 |
Bakens van die Ou Testamentiese Kanonontwikkeling binne die eerste vyf eeue van die ChristendomPretorius, Wilhelm 30 June 2008 (has links)
The dissertation identifies the beacons of canon development during the first five hundred years of
Christianity. These beacons are processes, events and certain persons from general as well as
dogmatic history, which played a formative role in canon development. The beacons are placed
within the historical, geographical and theological milieu, in which it took place. It especially
emphasises the role of human conduct and decisions in the process of canon development. It
provides a background of the development of a complex Judaism as the origin of Christianity, and
demonstrates the continuous impact of Judaism on Christian canon development. The differences
presented between these two independent religions are also mentioned. / Philosophy, Practical and Systematic Theology / M. Th. (Systematic Theology & Theological Ethics)
|
96 |
Charismatic Prophecy in the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada: An Old Testament PerspectiveBarkley, Stephen D 11 1900 (has links)
Prophecy is a major theme in Scripture and in contemporary practice in Pentecostal and charismatic settings. At its simplest, prophecy can be understood as a message from God delivered through a spokesperson to an audience, usually in the form of a revelatory experience. Despite the significance of prophecy in the history of Pentecostalism, the experiential coherence between modern-day charismatic prophets and Old Testament prophets has not been directly examined. Consideration of the literature shows conflicting messages. The application of biblical and historical studies tends to emphasize the divide between the Old Testament prophets and modern-day charismatic prophets while practical theological studies emphasize coherence.
The heart of this practical theological study is a phenomenological investigation of the practice of charismatic prophecy in the Canadian context. Five textural and three structural elements are identified: Prophets recognize the presence of God, receive the prophetic impulse, discern the source and recipient of the message, release the prophetic message or act, and experience attendant physical and emotional sensations. The way that prophets experience this phenomenon is impacted by their mentoring, setting, and response to failure. This phenomenological description was then compared with the experience of Jeremiah to evaluate the level of coherence. Aside from uncertainty regarding the distinction of the first two textural components and the issue of discernment, a strong level of coherence was discovered between the Old Testament prophets and modern-day charismatic prophets. Jeremiah and modern-day Canadian prophets experience the phenomenon of prophecy in very similar ways.
This high level of coherence leads to three conclusions. First, the application of biblical and historical studies that emphasize the discontinuity between the Old Testament prophets and modern-day charismatic prophets should be resisted in light of the data. This application—often based on a concern to safeguard the unique authority of Scripture from contemporary prophetic messages—is unnecessary since Canadian prophets hold a high value of Scripture that can be seen in the experience of Jeremiah himself. Second, Pentecostals should expand their narrative understanding backward in time to include the Old Testament prophetic lineage. Third, modern-day charismatic prophets should be encouraged to return to the Old Testament prophets for a deeper understanding of their practice.
|
97 |
A Karanga perspective on fertility and barrenness as blessing and curse in 1 Samuel 1:1-2:10Moyo, Chiropafadzo 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (DTh)--Stellenbosch University, 2006. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This dissertation seeks to develop further the theological interpretation of the books of
Samuel, by examining I Samuel I: 1-2:10 in the context of fertility and barrenness as blessing
and curse. This reading was related to the Karanga understanding of fertility and barrenness.
The contribution shows how the Biblical narrative can become a resource for ethical
reflection in African communities such as the Karanga women.
The hypotheses that guided this study, were that:
a-Fertility and barrenness in the Old Testament should be understood in close conjunction
with blessing and cursing as theological concepts in ancient Israel.
b-Fertility and barrenness could also be examined in a relevant and contextual manner by relating it to the culture and understanding of the Karanga people.
In order to achieve this, two major tasks were attempted. One: An exegesis of I Samuel I: 12:
10 in which Vernon Robbins' method of Socio- Rhetorical criticism was used. The method
helped to identify that the text is a narrative, and that the author might have been the
Deuteronomistic historian, who wrote in the period of the decline of the Judean monarchy
and when the Jews were in exile. The narrative is used to tell about the despair of the Jews,
and to inform the Jews that there was hope for restoration if they obeyed God. This ideology
is woven in the story of a barren woman Hannah who suffered the despair of barrenness and
was later blessed with a child because of her prayer and obedience to God. In the narrative
God is described as one who cares for the marginalised, and one who changes the lives of his
people, from curse to blessing. The method also helped to realise tbe culture and context of
Hannah, and made it possible to relate this culture and context to other cultures that are
similar.
Secondly an empirical survey was conducted amongst one hundred Karanga women. The
findings were that Karanga consider fertility as blessing and barrenness as curse.
The curse is experienced in the suffering of the barren women. Barrenness is used to inflict
pain, to marginalise women, and has become a major cause of divorce and death through the
spread of HIV and Aids. A reading of the story of Hannah helped the Karanga women to identify their barren problems with Hannah, and to find a new way of understanding their
own problem in terms of hope.
This study was able to prove its hypothesis both through the exegesis and the discussions of
the research findings. It was found that the narrative form of the text appealed effectively to
the understanding of Karanga women. This was possible because narrative is one of the
methods of communication that is used effectively by the Karanga in their language. Through
using Hannah as a paradigm of curse and blessing in relation to barrenness and fertility,
Karanga women were challenged to view their barren situations in a different way that is
open to accept change from curse to blessing. The study has also contributed to see how an
old text of the time of Hannah could in the present day contextually influence Karanga
women's barren experiences through holding the same culture and also by having similar
experiences barren of women. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie dissertasie poog om die teologiese interpretasie van die boeke van Samuel verder te
ontwikkel by wyse van 'n ondersoek van I Samuel 1:1-2:10 in die konteks van vrugbaarheid
en onvrugbaarheid as 'n seën en as 'n vervloeking. Hierdie ondersoek verwys na die Karangabevolking
se begrip van vrugbaarheid en onvrugbaarheid. Die bydrae toon aan hoe die
Bybelse verhaal 'n bron vir etiese nadenke onder Afrika-gemeenskappe, soos die Karangavroue,
kan word.
Die hipoteses wat hierdie studie gerig het, was dat:
a-Vrugbaarheid en onvrugbaarheid in die Ou Testament behoort begryp te word in 'n noue
verbintenis met seën en vervloeking as teologiese begrippe in antieke Israel.
b-Vrugbaarheid en onvrugbaarheid kan ook ondersoek word in 'n relevante en kontekstuele
wyse deur dit te verbind met die kultuur en begrip van die Karanga-mense.
Om dit te vermag, is twee hooftake onderneem. Die eerste was 'n eksegese van I Samuel 1: 12:
10 waarin Vernon Robbins se metode van sosioretoriese kritiek aangewend is. Hierdie
metode het gehelp om die teks as 'n narratief te identifiseer en dat die skrywer die
Deuteronomiese historikus kon gewees het, wat in die periode van die monargie van Juda
geskryf het en ook tydens die Jode se ballingskap. Die narratief word gebruik om aan te toon
hoe wanhopig die Jode was en om hulle in te lig dat daar hoop op hul herstel was indien hulle
God gehoorsaam. Hierdie ideologie is verweef in die verhaal van die onvrugbare vrou,
Hanna, wat aan die wanhoop van onvrugbaarheid gely het en later met 'n kind geseën is op
grond van haar gebede en gehoorsaamheid aan God. In die narratief word God as die een
beskryf wat na die gemarginaliseerdes omsien en wat die lewens van sy mense vanaf
vervloeking tot seën omvorm. Die metode het ook meegehelp om die kultuur en konteks van
Hanna te begryp en dit moontlik gemaak om hierdie kultuur en konteks te verklaar ingevolge
die van ander soortgelyke kulture.
Tweedens is 'n empiriese studie onder 'n honderd Karanga-vroue onderneem. Die bevindinge
was dat Karanga-vroue vrugbaarheid as 'n seën en onvrugbaarheid as 'n vervloeking beskou.
Die vervloeking word in die lyding van die onvrugbare vroue ervaar. Onvrugbaarheid word
aangewend om pyn en lyding te veroorsaak, om vroue te marginaliseer en het 'n belangrike bron van egskeiding en dood deur die verspreiding van HIV en Vigs geword. Deur die
verhaal van Hanna te lees, het die Karanga-vroue gehelp om hul eie
onvrugbaarheidsprobleme met die van Hanna te identifiseer en om nuwe wyses te vind om
hul eie probleme te verstaan in terme van hoop.
Hierdie studie was in staat om sy hipoteses te bewys sowel by wyse van die eksegese en ook
deur die bespreking van die navorsingsbevindings. Dit is bevind dat die narratiewe vorm van
die teks duidelik tot die begrip van die Karanga-vroue gespreek het. Dit was moontlik
aangesien 'n verhalende trant een van die kommunikasiewyses is wat doeltreffend deur
Karanga-vroue aangewend word in hul taal. Deur Hanna as 'n paradigma van vervloeking en
as seën te gebruik met verwysing tot onvrugbaarheid en vrugbaarheid, is Karanga-vroue
uitgedaag om hul beskouing van hul onvrugbare toestand op verskillende wyses te betrag wat
oop is om 'n verandering te aanvaar vanaf vervloeking tot seën. Die studie het ook daartoe
bygedra om te sien hoe 'n ou teks uit die tyd van Hanna tans kontekstueel die Karanga-vroue
se onvrugbaarheidservarings kan beinvloed waar hulle uit 'n soortgelyke kultuur kom en ook
soortgelyke ervarings as Hanna het as onvrugbare vroue.
|
98 |
Give us a king to govern us : an ideological reading of 1Samuel 8-12Lee, Hung-En 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MTh)--Stellenbosch University, 2011. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The purpose of this study is to explore "who is saying what to whom for what purpose" in the text of 1 Samuel 8-12 through an analysis of the manifestations of ideology in this text. The emphasis of this thesis lies in the application of multiple methodologies in biblical interpretation with a view to (a) reconstructing the material and ideological conditions under which the biblical text was produced in order to determine which group produced the text and whose socioeconomic interests it served; and (b) investigating how these conditions are encoded in reproducing a particular ideology in order to determine how the texts incorporated the particular ideologies or interests of the time.
The present research, for this reason, combines an extrinsic and an intrinsic analysis to read the world of 1 Samuel. The extrinsic analysis makes use of a social-historical and a social scientific approach to explore the particular circumstances. It indicates that the biblical writing should be regarded as conscious writing which aims to interpret historical incidents and construct specific ideologies. 1 Samuel 8-12 might therefore have been constructed by exilic groups to provide reasons for their difficult past. The intrinsic analysis makes use of narrative criticism, especially the theory of conflict plot, to do an in-depth investigation of the rhetoric of 1 Samuel 8-12. This analysis indicates that these chapters highlight the ambivalence of the monarchy, although the surface structure might tell a different story. The findings of the research have led to the conclusion that 1 Samuel 8-12 appears to present no clear position with regard to the future of the monarchy. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die doel van hierdie studie is om vas te stel "wie sê wat vir wie, en met watter doel" in die teks van 1 Samuel 8-12. Dit word gedoen deur 'n analise te maak van hoe ideologie in hierdie teks manifesteer. Die klem van hierdie studie lê in die toepassing van verskillende metodologieë van bybelinterpretasie ten einde (a) die materiaal en ideologiese omstandighede waarin die bybelteks geproduseer is, te rekonstrueer, met die oog daarop om vas te stel wie die teks geproduseer het, en wie se belange daardeur gedien word; en (b) te ondersoek hoe hierdie omstandighede enkodeer is in die formulering van a spesifieke ideologie, ten einde te bepaal hoe die teks die betrokke ideologieë of belange van die tyd geïnkorporeer het.
Om hierdie rede kombineer die studie 'n ekstrensieke en 'n intrensieke analise om die wêreld van 1 Samuel te lees. Die ekstrensieke analise gebruik 'n sosio-historiese en sosiaal-wetenskaplike benadering om die betrokke omstandighede na te vors. Hierdie benadering dui aan dat die bybelteks beskou kan word as 'n bewuste geskrif wat ten doel het om sekere historiese gebeure te interpreteer en om spesifieke ideologieë te konstrueer. 1 Samuel 8-12 is daarom moontlik gekonstrueer deur eksiliese groepe om verklarings vir hul moeilike verlede te gee. Die intrinsieke analise maak gebruik van narratiewe kritiek, veral die teorie van konflikplot, om 'n in-diepte studie te maak van die retoriek van 1 Samuel 8-12. Hierdie analise toon dat die betrokke hoofstukke die ambivalensie van die koningskap beklemtoon, hoewel die oppervlaktestruktuur moontlik 'n ander verhaal vertel. Die bevindings van hierdie navorsing lei dan tot die konklusie dat 1 Samuel 8-12 skynbaar geen duidelike posisie met betrekking tot die toekoms van die koningskap aanbied nie.
|
99 |
From time-bound to timeless : the rhetoric of lamentations and its appropriationGiffone, Benjamin D. 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MTh)--Stellenbosch University, 2012. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This study postulates a unifying rhetorical function for the book of Lamentations during the
Persian period. After the destruction of the temple in 587 BCE, the people of Judah were
geographically scattered and religiously and culturally fragmented. Lamentations, with its
ahistorical, timeless character, its acrostic form, its posture of protest, and its totalizing
references to all the different classes and groups of Judahites, became a rallying point for
Jews seeking restoration after the exile, as well as a perpetual reflection on YHWH’s role in
human suffering for oppressed Jews in many places and at many times through history.
The historical component of this study seeks to establish the fragmentation of Judah
and the goals of the various Judahite groups during the Persian period. The literary
component attempts to demonstrate Lamentations’ suitability as a portable, timeless
expression of suffering before YHWH, and as a source of imagery and motivation for Jewish
restoration hopes.
This study contributes to the understanding of the formation of Jewish identity, which
since the destruction of the first temple has been shaped by minority status in nearly every
cultural context, and by the evolution of a portable, textual religion. This study concludes that
the preservation of the book of Lamentations was both a reflection of and a contribution to
these two aspects of Jewish identity.
This study also contributes to the interpretation of Lamentations—and the genre of
communal lament—as literature and liturgy. It also explores the possibility of literary
connections between Lamentations, Isaiah 40-55, and the genre of penitential prayers. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie studie postuleer ‘n verenigende retoriese funksie vir die boek Klaagliedere gedurende
die Persiese periode. Na die vernietiging van die tempel in 587 vC was die inwoners van Juda
geografies versprei en godsdienstig en kultureel gefragmenteer. Klaagliedere se ahistoriese en
tydlose karakter, die akrostiese vorm, die geneentheid tot protes, en die totaliserende
verwysings na al die verskillende klasse en groepe van Judeërs, het ‘n aanhakpunt geword vir
Jode wat heropbou na die ballingskap nagestreef het, asook vir die voortgaande nadenke by
onderdrukte Jode in baie plekke en tye deur die geskiedenis, oor Jahwe se rol in menslike
lyding.
Die historiese komponent van hierdie studie probeer die fragmentering van Juda
gedurende die Persiese periode vasstel, asook die doelwitte van die verskillende groepe in
Juda. Die literêre komponent poog om te illustreer dat Klaagliedere uitermate geskik was as
oordraagbare, tydlose uitdrukking van lyding voor Jahwe, en dat dit ‘n bron van verbeelding
en motivering vir die Joodse heropbou-hoop was.
Die studie dra by tot die verstaan van die vorming van Joodse identiteit wat sedert die
vernietiging van die eerste tempel sterk beïnvloed is deur hul minderheidstatus in byna elke
kulturele konteks, maar ook deur die ontwikkeling van ‘n oordraagbare, tekstuele godsdiens.
Hierdie studie kom tot die gevolgtrekking dat die bewaring van die boek Klaagliedere beide
‘n nadenke oor en ‘n bydrae tot hierdie twee aspekte van Joodse identiteit was.
Die studie maak ook ‘n bydrae tot die interpretasie van Klaagliedere—asook die genre van
gemeenskaplike klag—as literatuur en liturgie. Dit ondersoek ook die moontlike literêre
verhoudings tussen Klaagliedere, Jesaja 40-55 en die genre van boetepsalms.
|
100 |
Prayers for remembering in the PsalmsDaffern, Megan I. J. January 2014 (has links)
The Hebrew language of remembering is complex and theologically interesting. The effective, relational, actualising aspects of zkr are particularly evident in language of prayer, especially in Psalm texts. Prayer is a remembering of God, a reminding of God, and a call to remember the pray-er herself, and such performative illocutions are addressed to both human and divine audience alike. The texts become not only present acts of remembering, but also means by which future acts of remembering are to be performed. Questions in Psalms criticism, of public or private Sitz-im-Leben, of form classification, and the ongoing debate about which critical methods to bring to Psalms scholarship, are brought together in an attempt to answer how remembering in prayer works in the Psalms. By employing hermeneutics informed by linguistics, not only the semantic field of zkr may be studied, but also pragmatic questions appropriately tackled. Thus the potential contributions of speech-act theory and discourse analysis when applied to the Psalms are indicated, alongside what comparable work has already been done by others in Psalms scholarship in these areas. Further linguistic insights which have not previously been applied to Psalms study, such as Audience Design, are then also brought to bear. Broader areas such as the theological nexus of memory, prayer, place and time, are then explored. Memory is thus seen to be an important constituent of Psalmic prayer at all levels of analysis, as a tool by which prayers are passed down and God and his people remain in relationship. Connections between remembering, didactic, and Wisdom are noted. The centrality of memory in the performance of prayer is viewed as a prototype for New Testament prayers, culminating in the Eucharist and evident for instance also in the Lord’s Prayer. Memory, in prayer texts and in their hermeneutics, both enshrines the past, and makes an ever-relevant present anticipate the future.
|
Page generated in 0.0519 seconds