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Full-Text Articles in Religion
Acts 4:19-20—An Overlooked First-Century Clue To Johannine Authorship And Luke’S Dependence Upon The Johannine Tradition, Paul N. Anderson
Acts 4:19-20—An Overlooked First-Century Clue To Johannine Authorship And Luke’S Dependence Upon The Johannine Tradition, Paul N. Anderson
Faculty Publications - George Fox School of Theology
No abstract provided.
From Mainz To Marburg: A Dialectical Engagement With The Master Of Diachronicity, Paul N. Anderson
From Mainz To Marburg: A Dialectical Engagement With The Master Of Diachronicity, Paul N. Anderson
Faculty Publications - George Fox School of Theology
No abstract provided.
A Fourth Quest For Jesus: So What, And How So?, Paul N. Anderson
A Fourth Quest For Jesus: So What, And How So?, Paul N. Anderson
Faculty Publications - George Fox School of Theology
No abstract provided.
The John, Jesus, And History Project—New Glimpses Of Jesus And A Bi-Optic Hypothesis, Paul N. Anderson
The John, Jesus, And History Project—New Glimpses Of Jesus And A Bi-Optic Hypothesis, Paul N. Anderson
Faculty Publications - George Fox School of Theology
No abstract provided.
Memory And Tradition In The Book Of Numbers (Book Review), Brian R. Doak
Memory And Tradition In The Book Of Numbers (Book Review), Brian R. Doak
Faculty Publications - George Fox School of Theology
Review of Adriane Leveen, Memory and Tradition in the Book of Numbers. New York, Cambridge University Press, 2008, x D 245 pp, ISBN 978 0 521 87869 2
Legalists, Visionaries, And New Names: Sectarianism And The Search For Apocalyptic Origins In Isaiah 56–66, Brian R. Doak
Legalists, Visionaries, And New Names: Sectarianism And The Search For Apocalyptic Origins In Isaiah 56–66, Brian R. Doak
Faculty Publications - George Fox School of Theology
This essay re-examines the difficult questions concerning the origins of apocalyptic literature and the rise of Jewish sectarianism. Since the publication of O. Plöger’s Theokratie und Eschatologie and P. Hanson’s The Dawn of Apocalyptic, the search for proto-apocalyptic origins in early post-exilic period sectarian conflict has generated a fair amount of debate. The most cogent and sustained response to Hanson’s and Plöger’s theories, S. Cook’s Prophecy & Apocalypticism (1995), attempted to purge the influence of “deprivation theory” from the field of biblical studies, and, more broadly, social anthropology. The present essay makes a fresh study of some central lines of …