Sabbath Observance in Luke-Acts: Situating the Earliest Followers of Jesus Within Judaism [PDF]
This study demonstrates that Luke presents the earliest followers of Jesus as steadfast Sabbath observers, challenging the common assumption that they abandoned or disregarded this practice.
David Wilber
doaj +3 more sources
Paul within Judaism: Perspectives on Paul and Jewish Identity [PDF]
Die Beiträge in diesem Konferenzband repräsentieren den neuesten Stand der Forschung zu den kontroversen Debatten um das Verhältnis des Paulus zum Judentum. Zu den Schlüsselfragen, die hier diskutiert werden, gehören unterschiedliche Perspektiven auf die
Frey, Jörg
core +3 more sources
Bör ersättningsteologin ersättas? [PDF]
Should supersessionism be superseded? Noting that supersessionism is routinely dismissed as a detestable error in Swedish public discourse as well as in academic theology, this article aims at providing some deeper reflection on what is denoted by the ...
Tobias Hägerland
core +2 more sources
THE TIME OF POLITICS, THE POLITICS OF TIME, AND POLITICIZED TIME: AN INTRODUCTION TO CHRONOPOLITICS
ABSTRACT Time is so deeply interwoven with all aspects of politics that its centrality to the political is frequently overlooked. For one, politics has its own times and rhythms. Secondly, time can be an object and an instrument of politics. Thirdly, temporal attributes are used not only to differentiate basic political principles but also to ...
Fernando Esposito, Tobias Becker
wiley +1 more source
Cannibal Maria in the Siege of Jerusalem: New approaches
Abstract This essay traces the far‐reaching legend of Maria/Miriam of Bethezuba, sometimes called Mary, Marie, or Marion, a starving Jewish woman who (according to Flavius Josephus's The Jewish War) ate her own baby during the 70 CE Roman Siege of Jerusalem.
Mo Pareles
wiley +1 more source
An Exhibition in Negative: Nigel Henderson, Parallel of Life and Art and the Photographic Image
This essay focuses on a series of photographic negatives relating to the ground‐breaking exhibition Parallel of Life and Art, which opened at London's Institute of Contemporary Arts in 1953. Painstakingly preserved by one of the five exhibition‐makers, the artist‐photographer Nigel Henderson, these dark, translucent forms of photographic image offer ...
Rosie Ram
wiley +1 more source
From Sovereignty to Guardianship in Ecoregions
ABSTRACT Recent scientific studies suggest that the destabilisation of the earth's climate and biodiversity loss are not separate, but interdependent phenomena. In this context, some have proposed the creation of a ‘Global Safety Net’ of ecoregions that should be preserved to stop further biodiversity loss, preventing at the same time the growth of CO2
Alejandra Mancilla
wiley +1 more source
Being Wounded: Finitude and the Infinite in Jean Louis Chrétien and Gregory of Nyssa
Abstract Wounds appear throughout the writings of Jean‐Louis Chrétien and Gregory of Nyssa. Most well known in Chrétien's corpus is his description of prayer as a “wounded word,” a phrase that seeks to describe an ungraspable dimension of phenomenal life in which the contingency and groundlessness of finitude appear as gifts.
Thomas Breedlove
wiley +1 more source
Circular disruption: Digitalisation as a driver of circular economy business models
Abstract New circular business models can evolve at all stages of the life cycle of a product. Digitalisation can drive disruptive innovations, new business models and novel ways of collaboration and thus can accelerate the economic transition to more resource‐efficient and circular production systems.
Adriana Neligan +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Of Oil and Agency: Scotland and the Material Conditions of National Imagining
Abstract North Sea oil discoveries introduced a qualitative divide that gave rise to at least the prospect of an economically viable Scottish independence, insofar as it made the “Scottish economy” a legitimate point of contestation on constitutional lines.
James Foley
wiley +1 more source

