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Gospel According to Luke: Volume I (Luke 1-9:50) [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 520 pages, height x width x depth: 228x152x29 mm, weight: 757 g
  • Sērija : Baylor-Mohr Siebeck Studies in Early Christianity
  • Izdošanas datums: 08-Oct-2018
  • Izdevniecība: Baylor University Press
  • ISBN-10: 148130593X
  • ISBN-13: 9781481305938
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 520 pages, height x width x depth: 228x152x29 mm, weight: 757 g
  • Sērija : Baylor-Mohr Siebeck Studies in Early Christianity
  • Izdošanas datums: 08-Oct-2018
  • Izdevniecība: Baylor University Press
  • ISBN-10: 148130593X
  • ISBN-13: 9781481305938
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
In this fourth volume of the Baylor-Mohr Siebeck Studies in Early Christianity, Michael Wolter provides a detailed, verse-by-verse interpretation of the Third Evangelist. Wolter's commentary fully complements the great tradition of "Handbooks of the New Testament" published by Mohr Siebeck. Replacing the third edition of Erich Klostermann's commentary on Luke, Wolter's volume rightly joins those by Conzelmann (Acts), K?ńsemann (Romans), and Lietzmann (1 Corinthians) in this venerable series.

Wolter's approach to a sustained reading of Luke's Gospel is comprehensive. He carefully places Luke's narrative of Jesus in its cultural context, paying close attention to the relationship of the Gospel with its Jewish and Greco-Roman environment. Wolter performs form-critical and narrative analysis of the specific stories; however, Wolter also emphasizes Luke as a theologian and his Gospel as a work of theology.

Wolter recognizes how Luke's narrative of Jesus forms the first part of a unified work - the Acts of Apostles being the second - that represents a new moment in Israel's history. But in surprising new ways, Wolter makes clear that it is God alone who works in and through the words and deeds of Jesus to bring salvation to Israel. His commentary shows that Luke succeeds in preserving the history of Jesus and its theological impact and that this history stands on equal footing with the history of early Christianity. Wolter's thorough, careful reading follows Luke as the Evangelist seeks to explain how the fulfillment of the Old Testament promises of God for Israel results in a parting of the ways between the Christian church on the one side and Judaism on the other. Scholars and students alike will benefit from access to new German scholarship now available to English-language audiences.

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Recenzijas

The joint efforts of Baylor University Press and Mohr Siebeck have made some of the most significant German research on the New Testament accessible to English readers. Michael Wolter's multivolume commentary is a worthy choice for translation, as it is marked by both concise clarity and a wealth of interpretive insights based on historical material and exegetical observations. -- The Christian Century This volume is a welcome contribution to English-language Lukan scholarship, in part for the reasons enumerated above, but also because Wolter refers frequently to other European scholars with whom American readers might not be familiar. Moreover, readers involved in Christian ministry will discover here a treasure trove of theological insights for teaching and preaching. -- Michal Beth Dinkler -- Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology [ Wolter's] extensive interaction with German scholarship is a gift to the academy, providing English readers a window into the wider discussions taking place in German scholarship -- H. Daniel Zacharias -- Bulletin for Biblical Research

Editors' Preface xiii
Author's Preface to the English Edition xvii
Author's Preface to the German Edition xix
Introduction 1(39)
1 Textual Tradition and Early Reception
1(3)
2 Author, Date, and Provenance
4(1)
2.1 Author
4(7)
2.2 Date
11(1)
2.3 Provenance
12(1)
3 Sources
12(6)
4 The Lukan Story of Jesus as an Episodic Narrative
18(8)
5 Intended Readers
26(4)
6 The Theological Place of the Story of Jesus in Luke-Acts
30(10)
1.1-4 Proem
40(14)
1.5-79(80) "In the days of Herod, the King of Judea"
54(61)
1.5-7 Exposition
57(3)
1.8-25 The Announcement of the Birth of John the Baptist
60(12)
1.26-38 The Announcement of the Birth of Jesus
72(13)
1.39-56 Elisabeth's Blessing and Mary's Praise of God
85(13)
1.57-79(80) The Birth of John, His Name, and His Father's Praise of God
98(17)
2.1-39(40-52) "... when Quirinius ruled over Syria"
115(39)
2.1-3 Exposition
115(4)
2.4-21 Bethlehem
119(13)
2.22-39 Jerusalem
132(15)
2.40-52 Jesus as a Wise Boy
147(7)
3.1-20 John the Forerunner
154(19)
3.21--4.13 The Presentation of Jesus as Son of God
173(22)
3.21 22: Spirit Anointing and Proclamation
174(4)
3.23-38 Genealogy
178(6)
4.1-13 Testing
184(11)
4.14-44 The Beginning in Galilee
195(26)
4.14-15 Exposition
196(1)
4.16-30 Nazareth
197(13)
4.31-41 Capernaum
210(9)
4.42-44 Departure to Further Proclamation of the Reign of God
219(2)
5.1-6.49 The Proclamation of the Reign of God in the Jewish Land
221(69)
5.1-11 The Miraculous Catch of Fish and the First Disciples
222(7)
5.12-16 The Cleansing of a Leper
229(4)
5.17--6.11 Controversy Dialogues over Various Themes
233(25)
5.17-26 Authority to Forgive Sins
233(7)
5.27-39 Eating and Drinking
240(10)
6.1-5 Sabbath I
250(3)
6.6-11 Sabbath II
253(5)
6.12-49 The Sermon on the Plain
258(32)
6.12-19 Scenic Preparation
259(6)
6.20-49 The Speech of Jesus
265(2)
6.20-26 Beatitudes and Woes
267(9)
6.27-38 The Nullification of the Principle of Ethical Reciprocity
276(9)
6.39-49 "He also told them a parable speech"
285(5)
7.1-50 In Capernaum and in Nain
290(37)
7.1-10 The Faith and the Slave of the Centurion
291(6)
7.11-17 The Son of the Widow
297(5)
7.18-35 Jesus and John the Baptist
302(14)
7.18-23 Who Is Jesus?
302(5)
7.24-28 Who Is John?
307(3)
7.29-35 Jesus's Judgment about His and the Baptist's Contemporaries
310(6)
7.36-50 The Pharisee and the Woman Sinner
316(11)
8.1--9.50 The Preparation for the Journey to Jerusalem
327(82)
8.1-3 Jesus and His Followers on a Peregrination of Proclamation
328(4)
8.4-21 On the Proper Hearing of the Word
332(13)
8.4-8 The Parable of the Fate of the Seed
332(3)
8.9-18 The Interpretation of the Parable for the Disciples
335(9)
8.19-21 Jesus's Mother and His Brothers
344(1)
8.22-56 Further Demonstrations of Jesus's δυναμισ and εoυσια
345(20)
8.22-25 Jesus's Power over Wind and Water
345(3)
8.26-39 Jesus's Power over a Legion of Demons
348(8)
8.40-56 Jesus's Power over Sickness and Death
356(9)
9.1-36 The Preparation of the Disciples for Discipleship
365(31)
9.1-6 The Commission of the Twelve
367(6)
9.7-9 The Perplexity of Herod
373(2)
9.10-17 The Disciples Make the People Satiated
375(7)
9.18-22 The Christological Insight of the Disciples and Jesus's First Announcement of the Passion and the Resurrection
382(2)
9.23-27 Instruction in Discipleship
384(6)
9.28-36 The Revelation of the δoα of Jesus before the Disciples
390(6)
9.37-50 The Inability of the Disciples
396(13)
9.37-45 ... At the Driving Out of an Epilepsy Demon
397(5)
9.46-50 ... And Also Otherwise
402(7)
9.51--18.34 The Journey to Jerusalem
9.51-56 An Inhospitable Samaritan Village
9.57-62 Consequences of Discipleship
10.1-16 The Commission of the Seventy-Two
10.17-24 The Return of the Seventy-Two
10.25-37 The Scribe and the Merciful Samaritan
10.38-42 Martha and Mary
11.1-13 On Prayer
11.1-4 The Prayer of the Disciples
11.5-13 Jesus's Speech on Prayer
11.14-28 Jesus and the Evil Spirits
11.29-32 "This generation is an evil generation"
11.33-36 The Eye as Lamp of the Body
11.37-54 The Woes against the Pharisees and Scribes
12.1--13.9 Jesus and the Disciples in the Midst of a Huge Crowd
12.1-12 The Encouragement of the Disciples to Public Confession
12.13-21 On the Worthlessness of Earthly Riches
12.22-34 Do Not be Anxious but Seek the Kingdom of God
12.35-48 On the Watchfulness and Reliablity of Service Personnel
12.49-53 Fire that Destroys Families
12.54-59 This Kairos as the Time of Decision
13.1-9 Last Call to Repentance
13.10-21 On the Sabbath in a Synagogue
13.10-17 Sabbath III
13.18-21 Two Parables on the Kingdom of God
13.22-35 Travelling to Jerusalem
13.22-30 Outside before the Narrow Door
13.31-35 Herod and Jerusalem
14.1-24 A Guest at the House of a Leading Pharisee
14.1-6 Sabbath IV
14.7-11 "Whoever exalts himself will be lowered" and Vice Versa
14.12-14 The Nullification of the Principle of Symposial Reciprocity
14.15-24 The Parable of the Rejected Invitation
14.25-18.34 Somewhere on the Way
14.25-35 Conditions for Discipleship
15.1-32 The Controversy Dialogue over the Repentance of Tax Collectors and Sinners
15.1-3 Exposition
15.4-10 The Double Parable of the Lost Sheep and the Lost Drachma
15.11-32 The Parable of the Prodigal Son
16.1-31 On Rightly Dealing with Money and Possessions
16.1-13 The Speech to the Disciples
16.14-31 The Speech to the Pharisees
17.1-10 Another Speech to the Disciples
17.11-21 The Thankful Samaritan and the Question of the Pharisees
17.11-19 The Thankful Samaritan
17.20-21 The Question of the Pharisees
17.22--18.8 When the Son of Man Comes
17.22-37 The Day of the Son of Man
18.1-8 The Parable of the Judge and the Widow
18.9-14 The Parable of the Pharisee and the Tax Collector
18.15-17 The Children and the Reign of God
18.18-30 Riches and Discipleship
18.31-34 Jesus's Second Announcement of the Passion and the Resurrection
18.35-19.46 The End of the Peregrination
18.35-19.28 Jericho
18.35--43 The Healing of a Blind Man before Jericho
19.1-10 Zacchaeus
19.11-28 The Parable of the Throne Claimant
19.29-46 The Entrance into Jerusalem
19.47--21.38 "And he taught daily in the temple"
19.47-48 Initial Frame
20.1-26 Jesus as Teacher of the Jewish People and his Opponents
20.1-8 The Questioning of Jesus's Authority
20.9-19 The Parable of the Tenants of the Vineyard
20.20-26 The Question about the Tax for Caesar
20.27-40 The Question about the Resurrection of the Dead
20.41-44 Is the Messiah David's Son?
20.45-47 Warning against the Scribes
21.1-4 The Gift of the Widow
21.5-36 Jesus's Last Public Speech
21.37-38 Concluding Frame
22.1-24.52(53) Passion and Easter
22.1-6 The Prelude: The Agreement between Judas and Jesus's Opponents
22.7-65 On the Day of Unleavened Bread
22.7-13 The Preparation for Passover
22.14-38 The Last Supper
22.14-20 Passover Meal, Breaking of Bread, and the New Covenant
22.21-23 The One Who Hands Over
22.24-30 On Serving and Ruling
22.31-34 The Announcement of the Denial
22.35-38 Coats to Swords!
22.39-53 At the Mount of Olives
22.39-46 Jesus Prays and the Disciples Sleep
22.47-53 The Handing Over
22.54-65 In the House of the High Priest
22.54-62 The Denial
22.63-65 Mocking
22.66--23.56 On the Next Day
22.66-71 Jesus before the Sanhedrin
23.1-25 Jesus before Pilate
23.1-5 Accusation and Trial
23.6-12 The Transfer to Herod Antipas
23.13-25 The Dispute over the Verdict
23.26-49 Crucifixion and Death
23.50-56 Burial and Preparation for the Anointing of the Dead
24.1-52(53) On the First Day of the New Week
24.1-12 The Empty Tomb
24.13-35 The Emmaus Disciples Encounter the Risen One
24.36-52(53) Jesus Appears to All the Disciples in Jerusalem
Bibliography 409
Michael Wolter is Professor of New Testament at the Faculty of Protestant Theology at the University of Bonn in Germany and Honorary Professor at the Theological Faculty at the University of Pretoria in South Africa. His book Paul - An Outline of His Theology is also available from Baylor University Press.Wayne Coppins is Professor of Religion at The University of Georgia.

Simon Gathercole is Reader in New Testament Studies at the University of Cambridge.