Rhetorical criticism of the New Testament / by Carl Joachim Classen.
Material type:
TextPublication details: Boston : Brill Academic Publishers, 2002.Description: vi, 194 pages ; 23 cmContent type: - text
- unmediated
- volume
- 0391041673 (pbk.)
- 9780391041677 (pbk.)
- BS 2361.3 C53 2002
| Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book
|
Storms Research Center Main Collection | BS 2361.3 C53 2002 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 98646086 |
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| BS 2361.2 .R94 1987 Words of life : a literary introduction to the New Testament / | BS 2361.2 .T55 1995 Rekindling the Word : in search of Gospel truth / | BS 2361.2 .T8 Grammatical insights into the New Testament. | BS 2361.3 C53 2002 Rhetorical criticism of the New Testament / | BS 2361.3 .C78 2013 Encountering Jesus, encountering scripture : reading the Bible critically in faith / | BS 2361.3 .D48 2005 The message of the New Testament : promises kept / | BS 2361.3 .D57 2005 Discovering the New Testament : community and faith / |
Originally published: T�ubingen : Mohr Siebeck, �2000.
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Paul's epistles and ancient Greek and Roman rhetoric -- Paul and the terminology of ancient Greek rhetoric -- A rhetorical reading of the Epistle to Titus -- Rhetorical observations on the introductory sections of the four gospels -- Melanchthon's rhetorical interpretation of biblical and non-biblical texts.
In view of the current debate on the application of Greek and Roman rhetoric to biblical texts, C. Joachim Classen aims at determining both the opportunities and the limits of such forms of criticism, stressing the importance of supplementing the ancient categories with modern categories. He emphasizes the difference between letters such as Paul's epistles and other kinds of texts, for example the gospels, and the need to select the aspects and criteria of rhetorical criticism accordingly and tries to illustrate how such criticism may be practiced. In addition, he answers the question to what extent Paul was familiar with Greek rhetoric by an examination of his vocabulary. Classen analyzes at length Melanchthon's early lectures, his handbooks, and his commentaries to show some of the roots of this type of criticism, the manner in which its greatest exponent developed it, and the qualities ideally required for its successful application. --from publisher description.
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