The New Testament in Its Literary EnvironmentWestminster John Knox Press, 01/01/1987 - 260 من الصفحات This volume in the Library of Early Christianity examines the literary techniques that were common during the development of the New Testament, and how these techniques influenced Scripture. The Library of Early Christianity is a series of eight outstanding books exploring the Jewish and Greco-Roman contexts in which the New Testament developed. |
المحتوى
Foreword by Wayne A Meeks | 9 |
The Gospels as Ancient Biography | 46 |
LukeActs and Ancient Historiography | 77 |
46 | 99 |
The Generic Features of LukeActs | 116 |
Letters in the Ancient World | 158 |
Early Christian Letters and Homilies | 183 |
The Apocalypse of John | 226 |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
Acts Jn Acts of Paul Acts Pet Acts Thom ancient antiquity Apocalypse apocryphal acts apostles Aramaic biblical canonical century A.D. character Chron church collection composition conventions dialogue digressions Dio Chrysostom Diogenes Laertius Dionysius Dionysius of Halicarnassus discourse divine dramatic early Christian letters emphasized epideictic episodes epistolary eschatological exhibit fictional formula Fortress Press function genealogy genre Gnostic Gospels Greco-Roman Greco-Roman biography Greek greetings Hebrew Hellenistic Herodotus historians historiography homily Ignatius important Israelite Israelite-Jewish Jesus Jewish Jews John Josephus Judaism kerygma Kings literary forms literature Lucian Luke Luke-Acts Mark Matt Matthew miracles motifs narrated narrative novels Old Testament oracles oral papyrus letters paraenesis paraenetic Paul Paul's Pauline letters Peter Philemon Philostratus Plutarch Polybius prophetic pseudepigraphical reflect resurrection reveal revelatory rhetorical Roman second century speeches stories structure Studies style term theme theological Thess Thucydides tion topoi traditions types vision writing written