The Function of 'Canonical' and 'Non-Canonical' Religious Texts
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Köp båda 2 för 575 krThis volume contains some very scholarly and useful studies... -- Journal for the Study of The New Testament, Volume 33 Number 5
James H. Charlesworth is George L. Collord Professor of New Testament Language and Literature and Director and Editor of the Dead Sea Scrolls Project at Princeton Theological Seminary, USA. Lee Martin McDonald is President Emeritus and Professor of New Testament at Acadia Divinity College, Acadia University, Canada. He is also President of the Institute for Biblical Research.
Preface: James H. Charlesworth and Lee Martin McDonald Abbreviations Introduction: 'What's Up Now? Renewal of an Important Investigation' James A. Sanders 1. What Do We Mean by Canon? Some Modern and Ancient Questions Lee Martin McDonald Response: Loren Johns 2. People of the Book and the Book of the People James H. Charlesworth Response: Andrei Orlov 3. Citation Formulae as Indices to Canonicity in Early Jewish and Early Christian Literature Kenneth Penner Response: Lee Martin McDonald 4. Rewriting the Sacred: Some Problems of Textual Authority in Light of the Rewritten Scriptures from Qumran Casey Elledge Response: Brent Strawn 5. Jude's Citation of 1 Enoch Jeremy Hultin Response: Leslie Walck 6. The Pseudepigrapha and the New Testament: The Case of the Acts of the Apostles Craig A. Evans Response: Brian D. Rhea 7. Apocrypha and Liturgy in the Fourth Century: The Case of the Six Books' Dormition Apocryphon Stephen J. Shoemaker Response: George Zervos 8. The Transfiguration Remembered, Reinterpreted, and Reenacted in Acts of Peter 20-21 Simon S. Lee Response: Henry Rietz Selected Bibliography: Canonical Criticism and the Use of Scriptures in Early Judaism and Early Christianity Indexes