essays from the Studiorum Novi Testamenti Societas /
edited by Gerbern S. Oegema and James H. Charlesworth.
New York :
T & T Clark,
2008.
1 online resource (xv, 295 pages).
Jewish and Christian texts in contexts and related studies ;
4
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
The pseudepigrapha and Christian origins -- Introduction / John M. Court -- The continuing quest for the provenance of Old Testament pseudepigrapha / Richard J. Bauckham -- Pseudepigrapha research and Christian origins after the OTP / Lorenzo DiTommaso -- The pseudepigrapha and the Synoptic Gospels -- Jewish martyrology and the death of Jesus / David A. deSilva -- Jesus' apocalyptic worldview and His exorcistic ministry / Loren T. Stuckenbruck -- The pseudepigrapha and Paul -- Adam and Eve in Romans 1:18-25 and the Greek life of Adam and Eve / John R. Levinson -- The story of our lives : the qz-text of the life of Adam and Eve, the Apostle Paul, and the Jewish-Christian oral tradition concerning Adam and Eve / Johannes Tromp -- Adam in Paul / James D.G. Dunn -- The pseudepigrapha and Luke-Acts -- The pseudepigrapha and the problem of background "parallels" in the study of the Acts of the Apostles / Craig A. Evans -- The pseudepigrapha and the narratives in Luke-Acts / Gerbern S. Oegema -- The pseudepigrapha and the revelation of John -- The apocalypse of John and Palestinian Jewish apocalyptic / David E. Aune -- The parables of Enoch and the apocalypse of John / James H. Charlesworth -- The reception of the Book of Daniel (and Danielic literature) in the early church / Gerbern S. Oegema -- Ancient Bible manuscripts and the biblical canon / Lee Martin McDonald.
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I n the Seminar "The Pseudepigrapha and Christian Origins" of the "Studiorum Novi Testamenti Societas", chaired from 2000 to 2006 by Professors James H. Charlesworth ( Princeton ) and Gerbern S. Oegema (McGill), the relation between the Pseudepigrapha and the New Testament has been discussed systematically and intensively in a way never seen before. The Pseudepigrapha investigated included the Old Testament ones and those found in the Qumran as well as the Pseudepigrapha of the New Testament and the ones used in the Early Church . The seminar and its participants, who were all internally ren.