Academic literature on the topic 'Bible. O.T. - Criticism, interpretation, etc., Jewish'
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Consult the lists of relevant articles, books, theses, conference reports, and other scholarly sources on the topic 'Bible. O.T. - Criticism, interpretation, etc., Jewish.'
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Bible. O.T. - Criticism, interpretation, etc., Jewish"
Davies-Browne, Bankole P. "The significance of parallels between the 'Testament of Solomon' and Jewish literature of late antiquity (between the closing centuries BCE and the Talmudic era) and the New Testament." Thesis, University of St Andrews, 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/10023/2685.
Full textKamell, Mariam J. "The soteriology of James in light of earlier Jewish Wisdom literature and the Gospel of Matthew." Thesis, University of St Andrews, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10023/977.
Full textIngram, Douglas Nairn. "The ambiguity of Qohelet : a study of the ambiguous nature of the language, syntax and structure of the Masoretic text of Qohelet." Thesis, University of Stirling, 1996. http://hdl.handle.net/1893/2589.
Full textDavies, James P. "Paul among the apocalypses? : an evaluation of the 'apocalyptic Paul' in the context of Jewish and Christian apocalyptic literature." Thesis, University of St Andrews, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/10023/6945.
Full textWheaton, Gerald. "The role of the Jewish feasts in John's Gospel." Thesis, St Andrews, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10023/942.
Full textSouthwood, Katherine. "Ethnicity and the mixed marriage crisis in Ezra 9-10." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2010. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.669966.
Full textDepoix, D. J. "Purity : blessing or burden?" Thesis, Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2002. http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/53024.
Full textENGLISH ABSTRACT: During the history of Israel the concept of "purity" had developed as a way in which God's people could honour his holiness and draw nearer to him, as a sanctified nation. By the time of Jesus, in Second Temple Judaism, the purity system had become restrictive. This had been influenced by political and social developments, including an increased desire to withdraw from Hellenistic and other factors which were seen as contaminating the integrity of Judaism. There were diverse perceptions regarding the achievement of the purity of Israel, including militaristic confrontation and expulsion of alien occupation forces, stricter adherence to the Law and, in some cases, total withdrawal from general society (such as at Qumran). It was, however, particularly the Pharisaic imposition of the supplementary oral tradition, supposed to clarify the written Law, which imposed hardship on those who, through illiteracy or inferior social status, were unable to meet all the minute provisions which would ensure ritual purity. The expansion of the Law of Moses by the commentary of the rabbis, which over time became the entrenched oral "tradition of the fathers", was originally intended to promote access to God by clarifying obscure points of the Law, in the pursuit of purity. However, this oral tradition had, in fact, become an instrument of alienation and separation of the ordinary people not only from the Pharisees, who considered themselves as the religious elite, but also from God. The common people, that is, a large section of the population, felt rejected and on the outside of both religious and social acceptance. On the material level they also suffered under a heavy tax burden, from both Temple and State, which aggravated their poverty. It was this situation which Jesus confronted in his mission to change the ideological climate and to reveal the Kingdom of God as being accessible to all who accepted the true Fatherhood of God, in penitence and humility. He denounced the hypocrisy which professed piety but which ignored the plight of those who were suffering. Hark 7 : 1-23 symbolizes the difference between the teaching and practice of Jesus and that of the Pharisees, and provides metaphorically a pattern of Christian engagement which is relevant in the South African situation today. The Christian challenge is to remove those barriers, both ideological and economic, which impede spiritual and material well-being within society. By active engagement, rather than by retreating to the purely ritualistic and individualistic practice of religion, the realization of the Kingdom of Heaven, as inaugurated by Jesus, will be advanced.
AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Gedurende die geskiedenis van Israel het die konsep van reinheid ontwikkel as 'n wyse waarin die die volk van God Sy heiligheid kan eer en tot Hom kan nader, as 'n geheiligde volk. Teen die tyd van Jesus, tydens Tweede Tempel Judaïsme, het die reinheid sisteem beperkend geword. Dit is beïnvloed deur politieke en sosiale ontwikkelinge, insluitende 'n toenemende drang om te onttrek van Hellenistiese en ander faktore, wat beskou is as 'n besoedeling van die integriteit van Judaïsme. Daar was diverse persepsies aangaande die uitvoering van die reinheid van Israel, insluitende militaristiese konfrontasie en die uitwerping van vreemde besettingsmagte, strenger onderhouding van die Wet en in sekere gevalle, totale onttreking van die algemene samelewing (soos by Qumran). Tog was dit in besonder die Fariseërs se oplegging van bykomende mondelinge tradisie, veronderstelom die geskrewe Wet te verhelder, wat ontbering veroorsaak het vir die wat as gevolg van ongeletterdheid of minderwaardige sosiale status nie in staat was om aan elke haarfyn bepaling, wat rituele reinheid sou verseker, te voldoen nie. Die uitbreiding van die wet van Moses deur die kommentaar van die rabbies, wat met verloop van tyd die ingegrawe mondelinge "tradisie van die vaders" geword het, was oorsproklik bedoel om toegang tot God te verseker, deur die verheldering van onduidelike aspekte van die wet, in die nastreef van reinheid. Hierdie mondelinge tradisie het egter 'n instrument van vervreemding geword en skeiding gebring tussen gewone mense en die Fariseers, sowel as die wat hulleself beskou het as die religieuse elite. Dit het egter ook skeiding gebring tussen mense en God. Die gewone mense, dit is die meerderheid van die bevolking, het verwerp gevoel en aan die buitekring van beide religieuse en sosiale aanvaarding. Op materiële vlak het hulle ook gelyonder die juk van swaar belasting, van beide die Tempel en die Staat, wat hulle toestand van armoede vererger het. Dit was hierdie situasie wat Jesus gekonfronteer het in sy strewe om die ideologiese klimaat te verander en om die Koninkryk van God te openbaar as toeganklik vir almal wat die ware Vaderskap van God aanvaar, in berou en in nederigheid. Hy het die skynheiligheid verwerp wat aanspraak maak op vroomheid, maar die toestand van die lydendes ignoreer. Markus 7:1-23 simboliseer die verskil tussen die onderrig en die praktyk van Jesus en dié van die Fariseërs en voorsien metafories 'n patroon van Christelike verbintenis, wat relevant is binne die eietydse Suid-Afrikaanse konteks. Die uitdaging aan die Christendom is om die skeidslyne te verwyder, beide ideologies en ekonomies, wat geestelike en materieële welsyn binne die gemeenskap belemmer. Deur aktiewe betrokkenheid, eerder as om bloot te onttrek tot die suiwer ritualistiese en individualistiese beoefening van religie, sal die realisering van die Koninkryk van die Hemel soos ingehuldig deur Jesus, bevorder word.
Clark, Ernest P. "Enslaved under the elements of the cosmos." Thesis, University of St Andrews, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/10023/13123.
Full textWilliams, Gillian Patricia. "A talmudic perspective on the Old Testament diseases, physicians and remedies." Diss., 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10500/3318.
Full textBiblical Archaeology
M.A. (Biblical Archaeology)
Cohen, Daniel A. J. "The non-Jews of Mark's Gospel : a Jewish reading." Phd thesis, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/150314.
Full textBooks on the topic "Bible. O.T. - Criticism, interpretation, etc., Jewish"
Zetterholm, Karin. Jewish interpretation of the Bible: Ancient and contemporary. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2012.
Find full textJ, Brooke George, ed. Jewish ways of reading the Bible. Oxford: Oxford University Press on behalf of the University of Manchester, 2000.
Find full textGreenberg, Moshe. Studies in the Bible and Jewish thought. Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society, 1995.
Find full textFishbane, Michael. Jewish hermeneutical theology. Leiden: Brill, 2015.
Find full textRojtman, Betty. Black fire on white fire: An essay on Jewish hermeneutics, from midrash to kabbalah. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998.
Find full textDray, Carol A. Studies on translation and interpretation in the Targum to the books of Kings. Leiden: Brill, 2006.
Find full textAdele, Berlin, Brettler Marc Zvi, Fishbane Michael A, and Jewish Publication Society, eds. The Jewish study Bible. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004.
Find full textNelson, W. David, and Pamela Barmash. Exodus in the Jewish experience: Echoes and reverberations. Lanham: Lexington Books, 2015.
Find full textLevinson, Bernard M. The right chorale: Studies in biblical law and interpretation. Winona Lake, Ind: Eisenbrauns, 2011.
Find full text1953-, Manekin Charles Harry, and Eisen Robert 1960-, eds. Philosophers and the Jewish Bible. Bethesda, Md: University Press of Maryland, 2008.
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