Old Testament Theology: Flowering and FutureBen C. Ollenburger Eisenbrauns, 2004 - 544 páginas In this extensively revised and updated edition of The Flowering of Old Testament Theology, Professor Ollenburger provides help for beginning theological students, who are frequently overwhelmed by the proliferation of volumes dealing with Old Testament theology, to say nothing of the variety of approaches used in these works. This textbook has been re-issued with a new title, Old Testament Theology: Flowering and Future, and is now divided into five convenient sections--Part 1: The Background, Part 2: Old Testament Theology's Renaissance: Walther Eichrodt through Gerhard von Rad, Part 3: Expansion and Variety: Between Gerhard von Rad and Brevard Childs, Part 4: From Brevard Childs to a New Pluralism, and Part 5: Contexts, Perspectives, and Proposals. Selected essays include key theological statements of Otto Eissfeldt, Walther Eichrodt, Theodorus C. Vriezen, George E. Wright, Gerhard von Rad, Walther Zimmerli, John L. McKenzie, Ronald E. Clements, Walter C. Kaiser Jr., Samuel L. Terrien, Claus Westermann, Brevard S. Childs, Rolf Knierim, Horst D. Preuss, Walter Brueggemann, Paul R. House, Bernhard W. Anderson, Erhard S. Gerstenberger, Hartmut Gese, Phyllis Trible, Jon D. Levenson, John H. Sailhamer, Gunther H. Wittenberg, James Barr, R. W. L. Moberly, and Mark G. Brett. An appendix contains Johann P. Gabler's 1787 seminal essay on biblical theology. An extensive bibliography and indexes of authorities and Scripture references conclude the volume. |
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... speaking of its rise and fall or its flowering and withering , they are of a relative kind , and the criterion of judgment must be derived from the history of Jewish - Israelite religion itself . It is therewith assumed that the ...
... speak, and then to place it once more outside oneself. But only in the encounter with a related life are these powers awakened: one comprehends only that in which one shares in some way—which one is like—and not more. One can view this ...
... speaking, the proper object of OT study. The tasks of this science are very various in char- acter, but this is the crown of them all; and to this, therefore, the other disci- plines involved are ancillary. But though the domain of OT ...
... speak, to a thin thread of historical connection and causal sequence between the two, with the result that an ex- ternal causality—not even susceptible in every case of secure demonstration— was substituted for a homogeneity that was ...
... speak to God as God speaks to him;2 on the other hand this should never make him think that his relation to God is a true “dialogue-situation.”3 Man cannot keep quarreling with God to the end: even if God does allow man to dispute with ...