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The broken covenant in Jeremiah 11: a dissertation of limited scopeMweemba, Gift 08 1900 (has links)
The times of Jeremiah were characterized by the spirit of imperial expansionism. Assyria had just collapsed and Babylon was quickly filling the vacuum. On the other hand Jeremiah was proclaiming doom on the nation because breaking the covenant. Which covenant? The covenant made during the reforms of Josiah. Was it the Davidic covenant or the Sinai Covenant? This research answers these questions and concludes that it was the Sinai covenant that was broken in Jeremiah 11 and led to the deportation into exile.
* Chapter 1 outlines the challenge. The problem statement, the hypothesis and the purpose are outlined.
* Chapter 2 delves into the challenges and problems pertaining to the study of Jeremiah. These are the historicity of Jeremiah, the ideological Jeremiah and the authorship of the book of Jeremiah. The deuteronomistic influence and the theme of Jeremiah are also examined.
* Chapter 3 is a study of the origin and history of the covenant. Here the pentateuchal roots of the covenant are traced form the election of Abraham to the Sinai covenant.
* Chapter 5 is a survey of the political and religious context of Jeremiah to determine whether Jeremiah experienced the times prior to the deportation. In this chapter attention is paid to the deuteronomic reform, the covenant with David and the Davidic ideology. The challenge in this chapter is the date of when Jeremiah commenced his ministry. This is due to the fact that Jeremiah is not consulted when the book is discovered in the temple. The prophetess Huldah is consulted by Josiah the king.
* Chapter 6 is a focus on Jeremiah 11. The process of identifying which covenant was broken in Jeremiah 11 begins with the examination of the literary genre of the chapter. The Deuteronomistic influence is also taken into account. The three key Sinai phrases which point to the Sinai covenant are outlined in detail leading to the conclusion that Jeremiah pointed Israel to the fact that the impending disaster was a result of their violation of the Sinai covenant. / Old Testament and Ancient Near Eastern Studies / M. Div. (Old Testament)
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The meaning of Diatheke in Hebrews chapter 9 with special reference to the Oxyrhynchus and other Egyptian PapyriWiid, John Sidney 15 September 2014 (has links)
D.Litt. et Phil. (Biblical Studies) / Please refer to full text to view abstract
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Eskatologiese akuutheid in die etiek van die boek OpenbaringMonacks, Clive Patrick Boetie 20 October 2014 (has links)
M.A. (Bible Studies) / Please refer to full text to view abstract
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Do Good to All People as You Have the Opportunity: A Biblical Theology of the Good Deeds Mission of the New Covenant CommunityWind, John 18 June 2015 (has links)
This dissertation provides a biblical theology of the good deeds mission of the New Covenant community, with a particular focus on how one’s conception of the overall covenantal structure of Scripture affects one’s conclusions concerning the good deeds mission. Chapter 1 introduces the debate over the good deeds mission of the church, whether good deeds out to the world have equal priority with evangelism or whether evangelism retains operational priority.
Chapter 2 provides an in-depth review of the relevant literature since 1974, covering the (overlapping) categories of missiology and biblical theology. The review is divided into literature supporting either the equal priority or the evangelistic priority position, highlighting the different biblical-theological arguments offered.
Chapter 3 surveys the good deeds responsibility given to all humanity, including the initial responsibilities of Genesis 1-2, the impact of sin upon this mission as displayed in Genesis 3-7, and the partial renewal of humanity’s good deeds mandate in Genesis 8-11.
Chapter 4 explores the good deeds mission given to Abraham and his descendants until the time of Christ, distinguishing the good deeds mission of Abraham and his descendants until possession of the covenant land, the good deeds mission of Abraham’s descendants from possession of the covenant land until the exile, and the good deeds mission of Abraham’s descendants from the exile until Christ.
Chapter 5 studies the good deeds mission of God’s covenant people in the Gospels before New Covenant inauguration, divided into two categories: the earthly ministry of Jesus Christ and the pre-New Covenant ministry of his disciples, giving careful attention to the unique transitional period of Christ’s earthly ministry.
Chapter 6 analyzes the good deeds mission in the New Covenant in three distinct categories: the inaugurated New Covenant ministry of Christ, the inaugurated New Covenant ministry of disciples, and the consummated New Covenant ministry of Christ and his disciples.
Chapter 7 summarizes the biblical-theological conclusions which emerge from the research of the dissertation, recapping the main elements of a biblical theology of the good deeds mission of the New Covenant community and providing practical applications.
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Verbond en zending : een verbondsmatige benadering van zendingWielenga, Barend 11 1900 (has links)
In this dogmatic study we develop from a Reformed covenantal perspective a missiological
theory which is applicable in missionary praxis.
In chapter I we account for our choice of the covenant concept as the cornerstone of our theory.
Added to this we explain our hermeneutical approach towards the biblical text in relationship to
the context of our research with special attention to the Bible as the canonical Word of God and
the own nature of theology as a science.
In chapter 2 we start our theological-historical orientation in the covenant concept with an outline
of our theological biography highlighting the covenant theology of the Dutch theologian K
Schilder and outlining the rise and development of Orthodox-Reformed covenantal theology from
the times of the Reformation.
In the chapters 3 and 4 we discuss the different covenants in the Old and New Testament in their
interrelationship with strong emphasis on their common structural elements, i.e. the unilateral
creation, the bilateral continuation and the forensic foundation of covenant. We pay special attention
to the relationship between the Old and New Testament with regard to the New Covenant.
In chapter 5 we discuss the dogmatic implications of our biblical-theological research in the
covenant concept with regard to the Orthodox-Reformed covenant tradition suggesting that this
tradition is in need of some adaptation in order to stay in line with Scriptural teachings on
covenant. We analyse the implications of interrelating covenant, creation and revelation. In this
analysis we pay attention to a covenantal approach towards creation and revelation. This
interrelationship is considered structurally from the three basic elements of covenant as well as
spiritually from the functions of the cult, the law and baptism in covenant.
In chapter 6 we draw missiological relevant conclusions from our biblico-dogmatic study
discussing from a covenant perspective several themes topical for a missiological theory which
has to be applied in missionary praxis. We round off our study with discussing mission and
creation with emphasis on inculturation, ecology and the theology of religions. / In deze dogmatische studie ontwikkelen we vanuit een gereformeerd verbondsperspectief een
missiologische theorie, die in de missionaire praxis toepasbaar is.
In hoofdstuk I geven we rekenschap van de keuze voor het verbond als hoeksteen van onze
theorie. We zetten in aanvulling daarop uiteen wat onze hermeneutische benadering is van de
bijbelse tekst in samenhang met de context van ons onderzoek, waarbij we speciaal aandacht
besteden aan de bijbel als het canonieke Woord van God en aan de eigen aard van de theologie
als wetenschap.
In hoofdstuk 2 beginnen we ons theologisch-historisch onderzoek naar het verbond met een
schets van onze theologische biografie, waarin we de verbondstheologie van de nederlandse
theoloog K Schilder accentueren en de opkomst en ontwikkeling van deze theologie in de
orthodox-gereformeerde traditie sinds de Reformatie beschrijven.
Wij bestuderen in de boofdstukken 3 en 4 de verschillende verbonden in het Oude en Nieuwe
Testament in hun onderlinge samenhang met nadruk op hun gemeenschappelijke structuurelementen,
namelijk het unilaterale ontstaan, het bilaterale voortbestaan en de forensische
fundering van het verbond. We geven speciaal aandacht aan de verhouding tussen Oude en
Nieuwe Testament met betrekking tot het Nieuwe Verbond.
In hoofdstuk 5 bespreken wij de dogmatische consequenties van ons bijbelstbeologiscb onderzoek
voor de orthodox-gereformeerde verbondstheologie en suggereren aanpassingen van deze
traditie, die nodig zijn om in overeenstemming te blijven met de bijbel terzake van het verbond.
Om een stevige fundering te leggen voor een verbondsmatige missiologische theorie analyseren
we de implicaties van het met elkaar verbinden van verbond, schepping en openbaring. In deze
analyse geven we aandacbt aan een verbondsmatige benadering van scbepping en openbaring. De
onderlinge verhouding tussen beiden wordt structureel beschouwd vanuit de drie structuurelementen
van het verbond en spiritueel vanuit de functies van de cultus, de wet en de doop
binnen bet verbond.
In hoofdstuk 6 trekken we missiologisch relevante conclusies uit ons bijbels-dogmatische onderzoek
en behandelen we verschillende themata die actueel zijn voor een missiologische theorie die
in de missionaire praxis toepasbaar moet zijn. We besluiten onze studie met het aan de orde stellen
van bet onderwerp zending en schepping, waarbij we aandacht besteden aan de inculturatie, de
ecologie en de theologie van de godsdiensten. / Philosophy, Practical & Systematic Theology / D. Th. (Systematic Theology)
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An experiment in Bible translation as transcultural communication : the translation of [berith] 'covenant' into Lomwe, with a focus on Leviticus 26Foster, Stuart Jeremy 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (DTh)--Stellenbosch University, 2005 / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The narrow question is how best to translate into Lomwe the biblical Hebrew term [berith]
'covenant'. But this question draws in many other issues when the contextual nature of
communication is taken into account. Using Leviticus 26 as a focus text, this study sketches a
complete arc from the impact at world view level of covenant concepts in the original to impact
at worldview level among present-day Lomwe-speakers in northern Mozambique.
This study defends a definition of covenant in its ancient Near Eastern context as a chosen
relationship of mutual obligation guaranteed by oath sanctions. A close reading of Leviticus 26
in its literary contexts highlights the integrating role of covenant in the Old Testament. Used for
Yahweh and his people, covenant language stressed that the relationship was exclusive, secure,
accountable and purposeful. However, Lomwe-speakers are traditionally matrilineal with no
adequate analogs to ancient covenantal customs. Protestant Christians among them, who have
not had the Old Testament in their language, show by their songs that they do not have a
covenantal sense of their relationship to God, but see life as a journey of escape to heaven
while under the threat of divine judgment. For the present experiment, volunteers preached
from a translation of Leviticus 26 to their congregations. In the resulting recorded sermons, the
covenant concepts emphasized were relationship and obligation (but not chosenness or oath
sanctions), and exclusivity and accountability (but not security or purpose). To compensate, the
study proposes specific steps for Bible translators and those involved in the broader teaching
task of the churches, especially dwelling on the potential of using muloko wa Muluku, 'people
of God' as an integrating framework. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die enger vraag is hoe 'n mens die Bybels-Hebreeuse term, [berith] 'verbond', die beste in Lomwe
kan vertaal? Indien die konteksgebondenheid van kommunikasie in berekening gebring word,
impliseer hierdie vraag egter 'n hele aantal ander strydvrae. Deur Levitikus as 'n fokusteks te
gebruik, skets hierdie studie 'n volledige boog: van die impak op die vlak van die
wereldbeskouing van verbondsbegrippe in die brontaal tot by die impak wat die vertaling van
hierdie konsepte maak op die wereldbeskouing van die Lomwe sprekers in die noorde van
Mosambiek.
Hierdie ondersoek verdedig die volgende defmisie van verbond in 'n Ou Nabye Oosterse
konteks: 'n Verbond is 'n vrywillig gekose verhouding met wedersyde verpligtinge wat
gewaarborg is deur die sankie van eedswering. 'n Noukeurige lees van Levitikus 26 in sy
literere kontekste beklemtoon die integrerende rol van verbond in die Ou Testament. As 'n
konsep wat gebruik is vir die verhouding tussen Jahwe en sy mense, aksentueer verbond die
feit dat die verhouding wat ter sprake is, eksklusief, veilig en doelgerig is, asook dat dit
verantwoording impliseer. Lomwe sprekers is egter tradisioneel matrilineer en het geen
instelling wat analoog is aan 'n verbondsverhouding nie. Die Protestanse Christene onder hulle
wat ook nog nie 'n Ou Testament in hulle moedertaal het nie, gee in hulle liedere blyke daarvan
dat hulle geen begrip het wat 'n verbondsverhouding met God beteken rue. Hulle sien die lewe
as 'n ontvlugtingsreis na die hemel te midde van die swaard van 'n goddelike oordeel.Vir die
buidige eksperiment bet vrywilliges vir bulle gemeentes gepreek uit 'n vertaling van Levitikus
26. In die preke wat op band opgeneem is, is die aspekte van verbond wat telkens beklemtoon
is, die van verbouding and verpligting (nie die van nabyheid of die sanksies wat verband hou
met eedswering nie), die van eksklusiwiteit en die doen van verantwoording (en nie die van
sekuriteit en doelgerigtheid nie). Om te kompenseer stel die ondersoek stappe voor wat
Bybelvertalers en mense wat betrokke is in die breere lerende taak van die kerke kan gebruik.
Aan die potensiaal van die konsep muloko wa Muluku, 'God se mense' word besondere aandag
gewy as integrerende raamwerk.
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Restitutio ad integrum : an 'Augustinian' reading of Jeremiah 31:31-34 in dialogue with the Christian traditionMoon, Joshua January 2008 (has links)
The struggle to read Jer 31:31-34 as Christian Scripture has a long and divided history. Yet remarkably little has been done to grapple with the depth of this struggle in the Christian tradition from the post-Nicene period to the modern era. This thesis attempts to show the value of the tradition as an interlocutor for contemporary exegetical concerns in Christian readings and use of Jer 31:31-34. The study begins with Augustineâs interpretation of the text as an absolute contrast between unbelief and faith, rather than the standard reading (found in Jerome) of a contrast between two successive religio-historical eras - one that governed Israel (the âold covenantâ) and a new era and its covenant inaugurated in the coming of Christ. Augustineâs absolute contrast loosened the strict temporal concern, so that the faithful of any era were members of the ânew covenantâ. The study traces this reading of an absolute contrast in a few key moments of Christian interpretation: Thomas Aquinas and high medieval theology, then the 16th and 17th century Reformed tradition. The thesis aims at a constructive reading of Jer 31:31-34, and so the struggle identified in these moments in the Christian tradition is brought into dialogue with modern critical discussions from Bernhard Duhm to the present. Finally I turn to an exegetical argument for an âAugustinianâ reading of the contrast of the covenants. The study finds that Jer 31:31-34, read in its role in Jeremiah, contrasts Israelâs infidelity with a future idyllic faithfulness to Yhwh: in the new covenant all will be as it always ought to have been. The contrast is thus between two mutually exclusive standings before Yhwh. Thus the study aims to contribute to modern exegetical, theological and ecclesial discussions of âoldâ and ânewâ covenants by examining one of the central texts of the discussion in dialogue with parts of the history of interpretatio
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Verbond en zending : een verbondsmatige benadering van zendingWielenga, Barend 11 1900 (has links)
In this dogmatic study we develop from a Reformed covenantal perspective a missiological
theory which is applicable in missionary praxis.
In chapter I we account for our choice of the covenant concept as the cornerstone of our theory.
Added to this we explain our hermeneutical approach towards the biblical text in relationship to
the context of our research with special attention to the Bible as the canonical Word of God and
the own nature of theology as a science.
In chapter 2 we start our theological-historical orientation in the covenant concept with an outline
of our theological biography highlighting the covenant theology of the Dutch theologian K
Schilder and outlining the rise and development of Orthodox-Reformed covenantal theology from
the times of the Reformation.
In the chapters 3 and 4 we discuss the different covenants in the Old and New Testament in their
interrelationship with strong emphasis on their common structural elements, i.e. the unilateral
creation, the bilateral continuation and the forensic foundation of covenant. We pay special attention
to the relationship between the Old and New Testament with regard to the New Covenant.
In chapter 5 we discuss the dogmatic implications of our biblical-theological research in the
covenant concept with regard to the Orthodox-Reformed covenant tradition suggesting that this
tradition is in need of some adaptation in order to stay in line with Scriptural teachings on
covenant. We analyse the implications of interrelating covenant, creation and revelation. In this
analysis we pay attention to a covenantal approach towards creation and revelation. This
interrelationship is considered structurally from the three basic elements of covenant as well as
spiritually from the functions of the cult, the law and baptism in covenant.
In chapter 6 we draw missiological relevant conclusions from our biblico-dogmatic study
discussing from a covenant perspective several themes topical for a missiological theory which
has to be applied in missionary praxis. We round off our study with discussing mission and
creation with emphasis on inculturation, ecology and the theology of religions. / In deze dogmatische studie ontwikkelen we vanuit een gereformeerd verbondsperspectief een
missiologische theorie, die in de missionaire praxis toepasbaar is.
In hoofdstuk I geven we rekenschap van de keuze voor het verbond als hoeksteen van onze
theorie. We zetten in aanvulling daarop uiteen wat onze hermeneutische benadering is van de
bijbelse tekst in samenhang met de context van ons onderzoek, waarbij we speciaal aandacht
besteden aan de bijbel als het canonieke Woord van God en aan de eigen aard van de theologie
als wetenschap.
In hoofdstuk 2 beginnen we ons theologisch-historisch onderzoek naar het verbond met een
schets van onze theologische biografie, waarin we de verbondstheologie van de nederlandse
theoloog K Schilder accentueren en de opkomst en ontwikkeling van deze theologie in de
orthodox-gereformeerde traditie sinds de Reformatie beschrijven.
Wij bestuderen in de boofdstukken 3 en 4 de verschillende verbonden in het Oude en Nieuwe
Testament in hun onderlinge samenhang met nadruk op hun gemeenschappelijke structuurelementen,
namelijk het unilaterale ontstaan, het bilaterale voortbestaan en de forensische
fundering van het verbond. We geven speciaal aandacht aan de verhouding tussen Oude en
Nieuwe Testament met betrekking tot het Nieuwe Verbond.
In hoofdstuk 5 bespreken wij de dogmatische consequenties van ons bijbelstbeologiscb onderzoek
voor de orthodox-gereformeerde verbondstheologie en suggereren aanpassingen van deze
traditie, die nodig zijn om in overeenstemming te blijven met de bijbel terzake van het verbond.
Om een stevige fundering te leggen voor een verbondsmatige missiologische theorie analyseren
we de implicaties van het met elkaar verbinden van verbond, schepping en openbaring. In deze
analyse geven we aandacbt aan een verbondsmatige benadering van scbepping en openbaring. De
onderlinge verhouding tussen beiden wordt structureel beschouwd vanuit de drie structuurelementen
van het verbond en spiritueel vanuit de functies van de cultus, de wet en de doop
binnen bet verbond.
In hoofdstuk 6 trekken we missiologisch relevante conclusies uit ons bijbels-dogmatische onderzoek
en behandelen we verschillende themata die actueel zijn voor een missiologische theorie die
in de missionaire praxis toepasbaar moet zijn. We besluiten onze studie met het aan de orde stellen
van bet onderwerp zending en schepping, waarbij we aandacht besteden aan de inculturatie, de
ecologie en de theologie van de godsdiensten. / Philosophy, Practical and Systematic Theology / D. Th. (Systematic Theology)
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A great king above all gods : dominion and divine government in the theology of John OwenBaylor, Timothy Robert January 2016 (has links)
Scholarship has tended to depict John Owen as a “Reformed catholic” attempting a synthesis of Reformed principles with a largely Thomist doctrine of God. In this thesis, I argue that this depiction risks losing sight of those aspects of Owen's doctrine of God that are intended to support a distinctly Protestant account of the economy of grace. By an examination of the principles of divine government, I argue that Owen employs the theme of God's “dominion” in order to establish the freedom and gratuity of God's grace, and to resist theologies that might otherwise use the doctrine of creation to structure and norm God's government of creatures. In chapter one, I argue against prevailing readings of Owen's thought that his theology of the divine will is, in fact, “voluntarist” in nature, prioritizing God's will over his intellect in the determination of the divine decree. I show that Owen regards God's absolute dominion as an entailment of his ontological priority over creatures. Chapters two and three examine the character of God's dominion over creatures in virtue of their “two-fold dependence” upon him as both Creator and Lawgiver. Chapter four takes up Owen's theology of God's remunerative justice in the context of his covenant theology. I show here that his doctrine of divine dominion underwrites his critique of merit-theology and attempts to establish the gratuity of that supernatural end to which humans are destined. Finally, in chapter five, I examine the principles of God's mercy, expressed in the work of redemption, where I demonstrate how Owen's conception of divine dominion underwrites the freedom of God in election and his account of particular redemption.
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The term berith (covenant) in the Historical and Wisdom Books of the Old TestamentLinington, Silvia 11 1900 (has links)
This work is concerned with the word berith (covenant) in the historical and wisdom books of the Old Testament, and continues research done in previous articles on berith in the Pentateuch and the prophetic literature. The main aim is to discuss in some detail the texts containing the word berith in the historical and wisdom books of the Old Testament and to examine the meaning and use of the word in these writings. The interrelationships between berith and other words in the contexts in which they appear are explored and explained. Finally, berith in the historical and wisdom books usually refers to one of the covenants of the Pentateuch, and which of these is applicable in each case will also be discussed. / Old Testament & Ancient NE / M.Th. (Old Testament)
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