Results 201 to 210 of about 181,573 (266)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 1947
Jesus written down by the disciple John, its contents have been taken as a literal, factual picture supplementing the other three gospels. Yet there is such discrepancy historically between them that for some time a "Harmony of the Gospels" has omitted this one and critical study has revealed an entirely different setting and purpose.
openaire +1 more source
Jesus written down by the disciple John, its contents have been taken as a literal, factual picture supplementing the other three gospels. Yet there is such discrepancy historically between them that for some time a "Harmony of the Gospels" has omitted this one and critical study has revealed an entirely different setting and purpose.
openaire +1 more source
1963
In the Gospel attributed to John, Andrew is presented as a personality who can be quoted, described, and consulted in his own right. The contrast between Mark and John is striking. Andrew and Peter are no longer fishermen by the northwest Galilean shore, but disciples of John at Bethany on the eastern side of the Jordan.
openaire +1 more source
In the Gospel attributed to John, Andrew is presented as a personality who can be quoted, described, and consulted in his own right. The contrast between Mark and John is striking. Andrew and Peter are no longer fishermen by the northwest Galilean shore, but disciples of John at Bethany on the eastern side of the Jordan.
openaire +1 more source
Community and Gospel: Vectors in Fourth Gospel Criticism
Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology, 1977Current study of the Fourth Gospel is marked by a growing concentration on the question about the community in whose midst it was written.
openaire +1 more source
Three Books On the Fourth Gospel
Novum Testamentum, 1956Of the many books and studies on the Fourth Gospel which have been published since the end of the war 1), two works, written in English, take up a particularly important place. They are The Interpretation of the Fourth Gospel by C. H. Dodd 2), and the recently published commentary by C. K. BARRETT 3).
openaire +1 more source
Understanding The Fourth Gospel
2007Abstract In this fully revised new edition of a pioneering study of John's gospel, John Ashton explores fresh topics and takes account of the latest scholarly debates. Ashton argues first that the thought-world of the gospel is Jewish, not Greek, and secondly that the text is many-layered, not simple, and composed over an extended period
openaire +1 more source
Thomas: The Fourth Synoptic Gospel
The Biblical Archaeologist, 1983The four canonical gospels are Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, but the four synoptics are Matthew, Mark, Luke, and Thomas. Author Davies explains why.
openaire +1 more source
Method in Fourth Gospel Studies
Journal for the Study of the New Testament, 1997Is a rapprochement possible between text-immanent, narrative-critical approaches to texts such as the Fourth Gospel, and the more traditional historical-critical approaches that operate with a presumption of an 'ideal' original meaning which interpretation seeks to reconstruct?
openaire +1 more source
Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 1949
HOW far is it possible for us to use the Fourth Gospel as a.reliable witness to the earthly life and teaching of Jesus Christ?" Professor W. F. Howard of Birmingham, England, asked this question in 1931 in his valuable book, The Fourth Gospel in Recent Criticism and Interpretation, in which he surveyed a generation of work on the Fourth Gospel, a story
openaire +1 more source
HOW far is it possible for us to use the Fourth Gospel as a.reliable witness to the earthly life and teaching of Jesus Christ?" Professor W. F. Howard of Birmingham, England, asked this question in 1931 in his valuable book, The Fourth Gospel in Recent Criticism and Interpretation, in which he surveyed a generation of work on the Fourth Gospel, a story
openaire +1 more source
Scottish Journal of Theology, 1965
In his contribution to the volume Essays in Christology for Karl Barth, Professor D. M. Mackinnon wrote as follows: To acknowledge the supremacy of the Christology is to confess that finality belongs somehow to that which is particular and contingent, to that which has definite date and place, to that which is described by statements that are not ...
openaire +1 more source
In his contribution to the volume Essays in Christology for Karl Barth, Professor D. M. Mackinnon wrote as follows: To acknowledge the supremacy of the Christology is to confess that finality belongs somehow to that which is particular and contingent, to that which has definite date and place, to that which is described by statements that are not ...
openaire +1 more source
Cervical cancer prevention and control in women living with human immunodeficiency virus
Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2021Philip E Castle, Vikrant V Sahasrabuddhe
exaly

