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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

'Their ways I shall recompense upon their heads' : past sins and the transformation of leadership structures in the Book of Ezekiel

Duguid, Iain M. January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
2

The chronology of the Hebrew Bible

Hughes, J. January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
3

La tentative de mise au pas des moines par les autorités civiles et religieuses entre 451 et 638 : Jérusalem, désert de Judée, Gaza / How civil and religious powers tried to submit monks to their rule (451-638) : Jerusalem, Judean Desert, Gaza

Lesieur, Bénédicte 13 December 2014 (has links)
Jusqu’en 451, la plupart des moines sont des ascètes urbains et suburbains. Ils vivent d’une manière autonome, empiètent volontiers sur les prérogatives des clercs et constituent une concurrence à l’autorité des évêques. Après le concile de Chalcédoine, les ascètes commencent à migrer vers les déserts proches de Jérusalem et de Gaza. Le succès de l’érémitisme et la rupture de certains avec le pouvoir épiscopal rallié au dogme chalcédonien sont les deux facteurs principaux de cette transformation du monachisme. Le problème de la soumission des moines à l’autorité épiscopale se déplace alors de la cité au désert. La fin du Ve siècle marque un tournant majeur dans le monachisme de Gaza et de Jérusalem. A partir de cette période, il évolue définitivement vers des usages conformes aux canons chalcédoniens sous l’impulsion des patriarches de Jérusalem et de leurs opposants gaziotes. Les fondations privées et publiques de grands koinobia dans le désert et l’émergence de « patrons » d’ermites qui financent des laures placent les moins sous le contrôle d’higoumènes eux-mêmes soumis à l’évêque. Les monastères se multiplient alors rapidement dans la première moitié du Vie siècle. Leur succès est accéléré par la montée de l’insécurité dans le désert et la démocratisation du mode de vie érémitique qu’ils permettent. Les pouvoirs civils et religieux sont donc parvenus à faire rentrer progressivement les moines dans un « carcan » que les lois de Justinien achèvent de formaliser. L’émergence d’un monachisme organisé et centralisé entraîne aussi son intégration définitive dans les structures du pouvoir byzantin, tout en assignant à l’autorité charismatique une place qui reste ambiguë. / Until 451 AD, most of the monks were urban and suburban ascetics. They lived independently, willingly impinged on the prerogatives of the clergy and were in competition for the bishops’ authority. After the Council of Chalcedon, ascetics began to migrate to the desert near Jerusalem and Gaza. The success of the anchoritic way of life and the severance of some monks with episcopal power rallied to Chalcedonian dogma are the two main factors in the monastic change. The problem of the monks’ submission to the episcopal authority moved therefore from the city to the desert. The late 5th century marked a major turning point for monasticism of Gaza and Jerusalem. From this moment, it definitely evolved towards practices consistent with Chalcedonian dogma under the pulse of patriarchs of Jerusalem and their Gaza opponents. Private and public foundations of large koinobia in the desert and the emergence of “patrons” of hermits who funded laurae placed monks under the control of abbots who were themselves subjected to bishops. Monasteries then multiplied rapidly in the first half of the 6th century. Their success was accelerated by the growing insecurity in the desert and democratization of anchoritic way of life they allowed. Therefore, civil and religious powers were able to gradually bring the monks in a “straitjacket” which was completely formalized by the Justinian laws. The emergence of an organized and centralized monasticism also entailed its final integration into the structures of the Byzantine power, while assigning the charismatic authority an ambiguous place
4

The Reconstruction of Judean Ethnicity in Q

Cromhout, Markus 29 September 2006 (has links)
This thesis focussed on the matter of Judean ethnic identity in the first century CE. At first we pointed out that New Testament scholarship lacks an overall interpretive framework to understand Judean identity. There is not an appreciation of what informed the entire process of Judean ethnic identity formation in the first century, or at any period for that matter. This lack of interpretive framework is acute in scholarship on the historical Jesus, where the issue of Judeanness is most strongly debated. We investigated the reconstructions of John P Meier and John D Crossan, and attempted to identify what content, be it explicitly or implicitly, or by omission, do they assign to Jesus’ Judean identity. But as yet, we were not in a position to say just what kind of Judean Jesus was. We then proceeded by developing a Socio-Cultural Model of Judean Ethnicity. At first Sanders’ notion of covenantal nomism was explored and redefined to function primarily as an ethnic descriptor. We combined the notion of covenantal nomism with Berger and Luckmann’s theories on the sociology of knowledge, and saw that covenantal nomism could function as the Judean construction of reality. It is a convenient way to define the Judean “symbolic universe”. Dunn’s “four pillars of Second Temple Judeanism” was then reviewed, which looked at the importance of the Temple, God, Election and the Torah. The “new perspective” on Paul as developed by Dunn also proved useful, as he brought attention to the importance of traditional customs (e g circumcision and food laws), and how it served as “badges” for Judean identity. The approaches of Sanders and Dunn, however, lacked the insights of ethnicity theory. Ethnicity theory has identified two primary alternatives when it comes to ethnicity formation: constructionism and primordialism. We looked at the attempt of Jones to integrate the various approaches by her incorporation of the concept of the habitus. An overview of Duling’s Socio-Cultural Model of Ethnicity followed, which lists all the relevant cultural features and which emphasises the predominant constructionist approach. We integrated all of the above into our own proposed model, which we termed covenantal nomism. It is a pictorial representation of the Judean symbolic universe, which as an ethnic identity, was proposed to be essentiall primordialist. The model was then given appropriate content, by investigating what would have been typical of first century Judean ethnic identity. It was also demonstrated that their existed a fundamental continuity between Judea and Galilee, as Galileans were ethnic Judeans themselves and they lived on the ancestral land of Israel. Attention was then focussed on the matter of ethnic identity in Q. We investigated the stratification of Kloppenborg and suggested that the third stratum which refers to the Torah properly belongs to the polemical and apologetic strategy of the main redaction. After analysing the two stratums it was concluded that Q points to a community whose Judean ethnic identity was in (re)construction. Apart from the cultural features of name and land, all cultural features demonstrated strong elements of discontinuity with traditional covenantal nomism. The Q people were given an eschatological Judean identity based on their commitment to Jesus and the requirements of the kingdom/reign of God. / Thesis (PhD (New Testament Studies))--University of Pretoria, 2007. / New Testament Studies / unrestricted
5

An investigation of the Beatitudes of Matthew : between oral tradition and Greek text

Day, Charles R. 02 September 2005 (has links)
An investigation of the Beatitudes of Matthew: Between oral tradition and Greek text investigates the Beatitudes in the Gospel of Matthew. It starts with the Greek text as it is known today and works backwards to uncover the different stages of tradition. Each beatitude is reconstructed in both Hebrew and Aramaic in order to ascertain the oral tradition which gave rise to the Greek text and, ultimately, to suggest a theoretical rendering of the original words of Jesus. The results indicate that the original Beatitudes were given in Aramaic. They were subsequently translated into Hebrew and it is this Hebrew version which is the antecedent for the Greek text (which itself underwent successive modifications) known today. The value of the results of this investigation is a more accurate understanding of the words of Jesus, having obvious implications for Bible translations and commentaries. The results further give a glimpse into how the Beatitudes were understood at the different stages of tradition and assess their modern interpretation in the light of their history. / Thesis (DLitt (Ancient Languages))--University of Pretoria, 2006. / Ancient Languages / unrestricted
6

Appropriating Judean post-exilic literature in a postcolonial discourse : a case for Zimbabwe

Rugwiji, Temba 06 1900 (has links)
The narratives about the postexilic Judean community are an ancient biblical account of the socio-economic and political experiences of the Judeans when they were finally restored back to Judah from Babylonian captivity. Although the Judean restoration was celebrated when they were restored by King Cyrus’ decree, real freedom did not prevail in the Persian province of Yehud; corruption, usury, greed, oppression, enslavement and loss of property impacted negatively on the poor. The leadership expropriated from poor citizens land, vineyards, and houses in exchange for food. In addition, the governors also charged heavy interest on money borrowed by poor members of society. Parents and their children were subjected to enslavement. In response to these corrupt practices, Nehemiah challenged the leadership to stop oppressing the poor. Nehemiah went further to provide food to the starving Judeans and other people from surrounding nations which served as a stimulus to strive towards alleviating poverty and starvation among communities. By employing an approach known as hermeneutics of appropriation, this thesis appropriates the experience of the postexilic Judean community to the post-independence Zimbabwean context. Between the years 1999 and 2008 many people lost their lives due to unemployment and lack of income, shelter, nutrition, and access to health-care facilities because of the economic meltdown following the controversial fast-track land reform programme in Zimbabwe. The majority of people are still experiencing the negative impact of the land reform as people strive to make a living in the absence of jobs and income scarcity. Corruption by the leadership has continued to further exacerbate starvation among the poor until today.This study attempts to employ the biblical Nehemiah’s social justice reforms (Neh 5) to challenge the Zimbabwean leadership to focus on rebuilding the country which was ravaged by a decade of both political and socio-economic crises. Lessons drawn from Nehemiah would be used to stimulate the leadership in the Zimbabwean government and members of society at large, to strive towards helping the poor and alleviating poverty. / Old Testament & Ancient Near Eastern Studies / D. Litt. et Phil. (Biblical Studies)
7

Appropriating Judean post-exilic literature in a postcolonial discourse : a case for Zimbabwe

Rugwiji, Temba 06 1900 (has links)
The narratives about the postexilic Judean community are an ancient biblical account of the socio-economic and political experiences of the Judeans when they were finally restored back to Judah from Babylonian captivity. Although the Judean restoration was celebrated when they were restored by King Cyrus’ decree, real freedom did not prevail in the Persian province of Yehud; corruption, usury, greed, oppression, enslavement and loss of property impacted negatively on the poor. The leadership expropriated from poor citizens land, vineyards, and houses in exchange for food. In addition, the governors also charged heavy interest on money borrowed by poor members of society. Parents and their children were subjected to enslavement. In response to these corrupt practices, Nehemiah challenged the leadership to stop oppressing the poor. Nehemiah went further to provide food to the starving Judeans and other people from surrounding nations which served as a stimulus to strive towards alleviating poverty and starvation among communities. By employing an approach known as hermeneutics of appropriation, this thesis appropriates the experience of the postexilic Judean community to the post-independence Zimbabwean context. Between the years 1999 and 2008 many people lost their lives due to unemployment and lack of income, shelter, nutrition, and access to health-care facilities because of the economic meltdown following the controversial fast-track land reform programme in Zimbabwe. The majority of people are still experiencing the negative impact of the land reform as people strive to make a living in the absence of jobs and income scarcity. Corruption by the leadership has continued to further exacerbate starvation among the poor until today.This study attempts to employ the biblical Nehemiah’s social justice reforms (Neh 5) to challenge the Zimbabwean leadership to focus on rebuilding the country which was ravaged by a decade of both political and socio-economic crises. Lessons drawn from Nehemiah would be used to stimulate the leadership in the Zimbabwean government and members of society at large, to strive towards helping the poor and alleviating poverty. / Biblical and Ancient Studies / D. Litt. et Phil. (Biblical Studies)
8

Josefus i relation till Assumptio Mosis : en jämförande undersökning / Josephus in Relation to Assumptio Mosis : A Comparative Investigation

Mänder, Peter January 2020 (has links)
This essay is based on trying to understand the relationship that exists between Josephus’ writings and the pseudepigraph Assumptio Mosis. Although the comparisons made between the texts in this essay are not enough to give a definite answer, none of the examples exclude that Josephus may have used Assumptio Mosis as a primary source. Rather, there are indications in which a direct relationship between Josephus and Assumptio Mosis potentially could explain from where Josephus acquires some of his source material, especially for his narrative of the time period around 4 BCE–6 CE. / Denna uppsats bygger på att försöka förstå relationen som finns mellan Josefus skrifter och pseudepigrafen Assumptio Mosis. Även om jämförelserna som görs mellan skrifterna i denna uppsats inte räcker för att ge ett säkert svar i slutändan, utesluter inga av exemplen att Josefus kan ha använt Assumptio Mosis som direkt källa. Snarare finns indikationer i vilka en direkt relation mellan Josefus och Assumptio Mosis skulle kunna förklara varifrån Josefus hämtar en del av sitt källmaterial, inte minst för hans narrativ om tiden runt 4 f.v.t–6 v.t.

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