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Philip the Evangelist in Lucan perspectiveSpencer, Franklin Scott January 1989 (has links)
No description available.
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IN THAT DAY: THE COMING OF THE SON OF MAN IN LUKE-ACTSKeesmaat-de Jong, Sylvia Christine 09 1900 (has links)
This thesis has been partially OCRed. Please contact for further accessibility services. / This thesis analyses the concept of the "Day of the Lord” as it comes to expression in Luke-Acts. In these books, this Old Testament concept is reinterpreted and used in conjunction with another Old Testament theme: the coming of the Son of man. An analysis of the Lukan passages about the coming of the Son of man (Luke 17:22-37; 21:5-36; 12:35-48) in the context of the contemporary historical situation of first-century Judaism reveals that when speaking of the coming of the Son of man, the Lukan Jesus is referring to a number of comings; namely, his own life (Luke 12) and the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 CE (Luke 17 and 21). The Old Testament imagery of the Son of man is used to show the nature of this coming: a vindication of those suffering "for my name's sake" (Luke 21:17). In Luke this message of hope and judgment is brought to Israel; Acts shows how the final age has dawned, extending this message of hope and judgment to the gentiles. The suffering of Jesus and his resurrection of vindication become the suffering of the church to be ended by another day of vindication and resurrection. Luke-Acts, therefore, points out the eschatological character of the coming of Jesus and the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 CE, for they are the beginning of an event that will be consummated in the final coming. In the mean-time, those who eagerly await that coming can claim the already fulfilled promises and testify to the Spirit-filled restoration taking place already now, in the last days. / Thesis / Master of Arts (MA)
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Luke's account of Peter in his strategy of proclaiming a gospel for all peopleParry, David Thomas Newton January 2014 (has links)
In his two-volume account of Christian beginnings Luke fills out for already instructed Theophilus Mark’s account of Jesus, and extends it to tell of the bringing of ‘good news’ for all people, offering a tested alternative to the pagan world-view, worthy to be adopted by citizens of the Roman empire. Primarily employing ‘redaction-critical’ methods and seeking narrative patterns with variations within the whole text, we analyse the roles of Peter in the first half of Acts and the influences upon Luke in their making. They portray the pattern of apostolic witness in message, deed and life, and anticipate the extending of the mission to Gentiles, which is taken up in a heroic way by Paul in the second half of Acts. Then analysing Luke’s reshaping of the account of Peter before Easter in his first volume, we show it is done with an eye to how it will be completed in Acts, how Peter will repent from denying Jesus to strengthen his brother apostles and urge repentance on his fellow-Jews. Luke’s captivating narrative is persuasive for its implied reader in the context of the post-apostolic age, that the apostolic kerygma proclaims the divine gift of salvation expected by Israel’s prophets, despite its rejection by much of Judaism. The missions of Paul are to be received as being in harmony with Peter’s. A foundation has been established which will outface Christian rivalries and strengthen believers under persecution. The influence of Luke’s account on other early Christian writers is tested where evidence is available. Luke’s success is that his account became, almost without rival, the canonical New Testament account of Christian beginnings.
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Theological medical ethics: A virtue based approachDinh, Hoa Trung January 2013 (has links)
Thesis advisor: LISA S. CAHILL / The Nuremberg trials ushered in a new era in which the four principles approach has become progressively the norm in Euro-American biomedical ethics, while the concepts of virtue and character become marginalized. In recent decades, the AIDS pandemic has highlighted the social aspects of health and illness, and the individualistic nature of the four principles approach proves inadequate in addressing the social causes of illness and poor health. At the global level, the promotion of the four principles approach as the universal norm can lead to the displacement of local values and customs, and the alienation of people from their cultural heritage. In this dissertation, I argue that although principles are indispensable, the virtue-based approach is more adequate in addressing these needs. The dissertation demonstrates that a virtue-based medical ethics informed by the gospel vision of healing would support models of health care that take seriously the social determinants of illness, and advocate action on behalf of the poor and the marginalized. At the global level, virtue-based medical ethics also allows the coexistence of the universal values and the local norms, and encourages cross-cultural dialogue. This dissertation develops a virtue-based medical ethics grounded in the Aristotelian teleological structure, and integrating insights obtained from the historical critical study of the healing narratives in Luke-Acts. It also provides a correlative study of the love command in Luke and the virtue of humaneness in the medical ethics of eighteenth century Vietnamese physician Hai Thuong Lan Ong. The concluding chapter brings these elements together in a discussion of the work of the Vietnamese Catholic AIDS care network. / Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2013. / Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: Theology.
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Understanding the Messiah : the rhetoric of perception in Luke-ActsMann, Joshua Lee January 2017 (has links)
This thesis argues that the rhetoric of perception opens and closes the Gospel of Luke and its sequel, the Acts of the Apostles, and occurs throughout both narratives as a central plot device. The epistemological theme created by this involves how characters understand the major events of the narrative, especially what seems to be a central element: Jesus’ identity as the Messiah and the scriptural necessity of his suffering and resurrection. The suspense created by the rhetoric of perception allows the author to both communicate key tenets of his theology, as well as offer the audience a model for accomplishing the purpose of his writing, to ‘recognise the certainty’ of his story (Luke 1:1–4). In the Gospel of Luke, suspense is created by the juxtaposition of divine revelation to the disciples and the divine concealment that produces their misunderstanding. This conflict reaches its resolution in the Gospel’s final scenes, in which Jesus opens the mind of the disciples to understand the Scriptures, enabling them to understand what was earlier concealed, the scriptural necessity of the Messiah’s death and resurrection. In Acts, the conflict of misunderstanding is no longer primarily internal to the disciples but external: It is a characteristic of those who do not believe, those to whom the disciples-turned-apostles preach, and it must be overcome through the repentance and belief of the hearers. The resolution provided by the conclusion of Acts is much more negative than that of the Gospel: In the Empire’s capital city, far from that place of illumination where the disciples earlier came to understanding, the proclamation of the gospel is essentially rejected by a Jewish audience to whom is applied the description of Isaiah 6:9–10, rich in its epistemological metaphor.
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The covenant concept as an organising principle in Luke–Acts / Frank Zoltan KovácsKovács, Frank Zoltan January 2011 (has links)
Thematic interrelation is an underdeveloped field of inquiry in Lukan studies. The
design and elegance of Lukan theology begs for guided investigation into a possible
system of organisation that governs history and theology, that is, narrative and theme.
Based on the Greimasian Actantial Model, morpho–syntactical structural–critical
analysis of Luke and Acts reveals that the covenant concept in its operative aspect of
service functions as an organising principle, structuring the narratives and facilitating
thematic interrelation.
A survey of representative Lukan research consisting of five methodologically
determined approaches shows a commonality regarding Lukan purpose. These all share
the “plan of God” as a fundamental concept, thus intimating its plausibility as a
common organisational principle in the text. This observation encourages further
analysis of Lukan narrative and meta–narrative as relevant subject matter.
Investigation into the purpose and goals of Ancient Jewish and Ancient Greek literature
suggests that the concepts of piety/holiness and justness combined with a notion of
divine order and expectation demonstrates organisational capacity.
Under the terms and conditions of the Old Covenant three non–exclusive
themes/concepts hold organisational functionality and ability to facilitate thematic
interrelation: Exodus typology, the covenant concept and the eschaton idea. Exodus
typology connects narrative with theme, developing Israel’s story. The covenant idea
frames stories using parallelism and gives the meta–story progression. The eschaton
idea presents the Day of YHWH as an organisational principle guiding the story of
judgment to restoration. It is observed that the covenant concept is the most prevalent
of these themes/ideas.
Assuming the conceptual unity of Luke and Acts and adopting a morpho–syntactical
structuralist approach, it was observed that the covenant concept in its operative aspect
of service occurred as Helper at ten places, determining the development and structure
of the meta–narrative. According to the Greimasian Actantial Model, Israel failed to
fulfil its covenant–based mandate to serve God and shine God’s light of mercy to the
nations. Jesus, Israel’s new Helper, becomes the Subject and by his covenant–based
ministry, characterised as the greatest service, resolves the problem that prevents Israel
from carrying out its divine mandate and sets the stage for its fulfilment. In Jesus Israel
is given new leaders, an ethical platform of discipleship and the Holy Spirit. The
apostle Paul as the epitomised and exemplary witness and servant of Jesus fulfils what
Israel could not. He is vindicated in righteousness and shares in the Isaianic ministry of
Jesus, to bear witness to leaders and to shine God’s light to the nations. Paul is
unhindered in this ministry. Additionally, in thematic–critical terms, the key placement
of the covenant concept in its operative aspect of service at plot–defining junctures
features its catalytic dynamic as a “template” concept advancing the re–conceptualising
of themes and providing a platform for meaningful relation.
The evidence thus suggests that the covenant concept in its operative aspect structures
the conjoined narratives of Luke and Acts. It also provides a basis for relation between
the divine and humans in the context of the history of God’s salvation, linking history
and theology, and makes possible a discernible means to thematic interrelation. / Thesis (Ph.D. (New Testament))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2011.
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The covenant concept as an organising principle in Luke–Acts / Frank Zoltan KovácsKovács, Frank Zoltan January 2011 (has links)
Thematic interrelation is an underdeveloped field of inquiry in Lukan studies. The
design and elegance of Lukan theology begs for guided investigation into a possible
system of organisation that governs history and theology, that is, narrative and theme.
Based on the Greimasian Actantial Model, morpho–syntactical structural–critical
analysis of Luke and Acts reveals that the covenant concept in its operative aspect of
service functions as an organising principle, structuring the narratives and facilitating
thematic interrelation.
A survey of representative Lukan research consisting of five methodologically
determined approaches shows a commonality regarding Lukan purpose. These all share
the “plan of God” as a fundamental concept, thus intimating its plausibility as a
common organisational principle in the text. This observation encourages further
analysis of Lukan narrative and meta–narrative as relevant subject matter.
Investigation into the purpose and goals of Ancient Jewish and Ancient Greek literature
suggests that the concepts of piety/holiness and justness combined with a notion of
divine order and expectation demonstrates organisational capacity.
Under the terms and conditions of the Old Covenant three non–exclusive
themes/concepts hold organisational functionality and ability to facilitate thematic
interrelation: Exodus typology, the covenant concept and the eschaton idea. Exodus
typology connects narrative with theme, developing Israel’s story. The covenant idea
frames stories using parallelism and gives the meta–story progression. The eschaton
idea presents the Day of YHWH as an organisational principle guiding the story of
judgment to restoration. It is observed that the covenant concept is the most prevalent
of these themes/ideas.
Assuming the conceptual unity of Luke and Acts and adopting a morpho–syntactical
structuralist approach, it was observed that the covenant concept in its operative aspect
of service occurred as Helper at ten places, determining the development and structure
of the meta–narrative. According to the Greimasian Actantial Model, Israel failed to
fulfil its covenant–based mandate to serve God and shine God’s light of mercy to the
nations. Jesus, Israel’s new Helper, becomes the Subject and by his covenant–based
ministry, characterised as the greatest service, resolves the problem that prevents Israel
from carrying out its divine mandate and sets the stage for its fulfilment. In Jesus Israel
is given new leaders, an ethical platform of discipleship and the Holy Spirit. The
apostle Paul as the epitomised and exemplary witness and servant of Jesus fulfils what
Israel could not. He is vindicated in righteousness and shares in the Isaianic ministry of
Jesus, to bear witness to leaders and to shine God’s light to the nations. Paul is
unhindered in this ministry. Additionally, in thematic–critical terms, the key placement
of the covenant concept in its operative aspect of service at plot–defining junctures
features its catalytic dynamic as a “template” concept advancing the re–conceptualising
of themes and providing a platform for meaningful relation.
The evidence thus suggests that the covenant concept in its operative aspect structures
the conjoined narratives of Luke and Acts. It also provides a basis for relation between
the divine and humans in the context of the history of God’s salvation, linking history
and theology, and makes possible a discernible means to thematic interrelation. / Thesis (Ph.D. (New Testament))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2011.
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Spirits in the first-century Jewish world, Luke-Acts and in the African context: an analysisKhathide, Goodman Agrippa 20 May 2005 (has links)
In many African traditional societies, the felt needs of people are usually met by the services of the shaman or other traditional medicine specialists. These needs vary and they could include the need for protection against witchcraft and evil spirits. Another need in Africa is for physical and psychical health. These needs are felt by many Africans inside and outside ecclesiastical structures. Despite centuries of western influence and teaching by missionaries, these felt needs have not gone away. The sensitivity to the spirit world and its impact on the human and material word still remains a firm belief in the African socio-spiritual reality. In its missiological responsibilities in the past and now, the church in Africa continues to display a theological deficiency in addressing this vacuum in African spirituality. Consequently, many African Christians are trapped in the dual, two-tier or split-level Christianity. This shows itself in times of existential crises in which many committed and respectable African Christians revert to traditional religious practices as a means of meeting their spiritual needs, due to the church’s inability to do so. This observed lack of traditional Christian theology and its irrelevancy to African life, has left many African Christians in a dilemma. It is this lacuna in Christian theology and practice that the researcher seeks to address in this study. By analysing documents on spirits in the first-century Jewish world and the two-volume work of Luke-Acts, the researcher endeavours to show the relevance and possible appropriation of the New Testament message to African spiritual realities. This is based on the understanding that the world of the first-century Jews and other communities in the Mediterranean region at the time, has more in common with Africans than the extremely naturalistic, rationalistic and abstract-oriented worldview of the early western missionaries who initially brought the gospel to Africa. Central to the researcher’s thesis, is the argument that, if early Christians, as exemplified by the Lucan audience, could respond to the fears, problems and realities of the spirit world by using God-ordained, spiritual and biblically acceptable means and not magical ways, African Christians, too, who find themselves in similar situations, can do the same. The contention in this study is that the rediscovery of the aspect of the spirit world of the New Testament message will go a long way towards resolving the problem of split-level Christianity in Africa. This task remains a theological imperative for New Testament scholarship in order for the church to present a holistic message to the masses of Africa and to demonstrate how the immanence of the Christian God in Jesus Christ through the power of the Holy Spirit, relates to the daily needs of spirit-sensitive Africans – a message that Luke tried so hard to convey to his readers in the first century. / Thesis (PhD (New Testament Studies))--University of Pretoria, 2006. / New Testament Studies / unrestricted
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Paul in the Gentile Synagogue: The Areopagus Episode (Acts 17:16-34) in its Literary and Spatial ContextTumblin, Jericha Brenn January 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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In That Day: The Coming of the Son of Man in Luke-ActsKeesmaat-de Jong, Sylvia Christine 09 1900 (has links)
This thesis analyses the concept of the "Day of the Lord" as it comes to expression in Luke-Acts. In these books, this Old Testament concept is reinterpreted and used in conjunction with another Old Testament theme: the coming of the Son of man. An analysis of the Lukan passages about the coming of the Son of man (Luke 17:22-37i 21:5-36; 12:35-48) in the context of the contemporary historical situation of first-century Judaism reveals that when speaking of the coming of the Son of man, the Lukan Jesus is referring to a number of comings; namely, his own life (Luke 12) and the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 CE (Luke 17 and 21). The Old Testament imagery of the Son of man is used to show the nature of this coming: a vindication of those suffering "for my name's sake" (Luke 21: 17). In Luke this message of hope and judgment is brought to Israel; Acts shows how the final age has dawned, extending this message of hope and judgment to the gentiles. The suffering of Jesus and his resurrection of vindication become the suffering of the church to be ended by another day of vindication and resurrection. Luke-Acts, therefore, points out the eschatological character of the coming of Jesus and the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 CE, for they are the beginning of an event that will be consununated in the final coming. In the mean-time, those who eagerly await that coming can claim the already fulfilled promises and testify to the Spirit-filled restoration taking place already now, in the last days. / Thesis / Master of Arts (MA)
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