The crowds in the Gospel of Matthew [electronic resource]

الغلاف الأمامي
BRILL, 2002 - 361 من الصفحات
This volume identifies the crowds (ochloi) in the Gospel of Matthew and explains their character and function. It argues that a proper appreciation of the crowds is essential to an understanding of salvation history in the gospel. The book identifies the crowds as Jewish, and establishes that both the positive and negative characterizations of the crowds correspond to portrayals of Israel drawn from the Hebrew Scriptures. It concludes that the crowds are also meant to be figurative for the Jewish people of Matthew's own day. New Testament scholars, particularly specialists in Matthew and the Synoptic Gospels will find the volume useful, and it will also appeal to those interested in early Jewish-Christian relations and the "parting of the ways" between the two faiths.
 

المحتوى

CHAPTER
3
B J D Kingsbury
9
E Warren Carter
16
Presuppositions and Methodology
23
THE IDENTITY OF THE CROWD
29
B Use of the term öxλoç in Matthew
35
E The Crowds as a Literary Construct
43
F Conclusion
50
CHAPTER EIGHT
175
The Royal Son of David
181
E The Crowds and the Son of David
191
G Conclusion
198
DEATH AND THE PROPHET
205
11?
213
E The Crowds and Jesus the Prophet
222
1526
231

The Decapolis
58
29
68
A The Relation of the Crowds to Israel 75 2385 5
75
The Crowds as Sheep
86
Conclusion
97
διδάσκω
103
F Feeding
117
CHAPTER
125
F δοξάζω
132
H Matthews Use of the Responses
140
B The Crowds and the Demands of Jesus
148
Discipleship in Matthew
154
G Following and Miracles
163
H Sheep and Shepherd
169
The Crowds after the Passion
237
The Portrait of the Crowds in Chapter 13
247
1823
256
TRANSPARENT CROWDS
263
B The Transparent Crowds
270
Matthews Dual Economy
281
The Function of Matthews Narrative of the Crowds
288
E Matthews SitzimLeben
294
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
301
BIBLIOGRAPHY
309
Index of References
333
Index of Authors
351
Index of Subjects
357
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نبذة عن المؤلف (2002)

J.R.C. Cousland, Ph.D.(199l) in New Testament, University of St. Andrews, is Assistant Professor in Classical, Near Eastern and Religious Studies at tbe University of British Columbia. He has publisbed a number of articles on tbe Gospel of Matthew and on Jewish-Hellenistic literature.

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