Results 21 to 30 of about 16,811 (229)
Celebrating Synodality: Synodality as a Fundamental Aspect of Christian Liturgy
Abstract A synodal church makes assumptions about our basic ecclesial experience which takes place when we assemble liturgically, especially when we act eucharistically. The basic assumption is that we are a genuine human community knowing and relating to one another as brothers and sisters in baptism.
Thomas O' Loughlin
wiley +1 more source
Abstract The fifteenth‐century Italian humanists applied their ideas on translation and textual scholarship not only to classical texts, but also to Scripture. One problem they encountered was the rendering of biblical passages in their patristic translations.
Annet den Haan
wiley +1 more source
Origen’s Johannine Trinitarian Theology of Love
Abstract Origen is the first Christian who proposed a systematically Trinitarian theology of love. This has largely escaped the attention of theologians and remains underexplored. One notable consequence is that this has severely limited our appreciation of Origen as a significant interlocutor for contemporary theology since the Trinity as love is ...
Pui Him Ip
wiley +1 more source
The Biblical Hebrew idiom ‘lift the face’ in the Septuagint of Job
This study examined the renderings of the Biblical Hebrew idiom ‘lift the face’ (םינפ אשנ) in the Septuagint of Job in comparison with the renderings of the Biblical Hebrew idiom elsewhere in the Septuagint and in other ancient versions including the ...
Douglas Mangum
doaj +1 more source
Aquinas on Evil and the Will: A response to Mackie*
Abstract This article argues that, without being reducible to a version of the Free Will Defence, Aquinas' theodicy and philosophical theology can offer contemporary versions of the Free Will Defence stronger metaphysical and theological foundations from which a response to Mackie's compatibilistic challenge – probably the most serious challenge ...
Facundo Rodríguez
wiley +1 more source
Samaritans in the New Testament
Four New Testament writings mention Samaritans and Samaria—Luke−Acts, John, and Matthew. We must consider that all Samaritan texts in the New Testament are based on a historically correct knowledge of the cult of YHWH worshippers in Samaria ...
Martina Böhm
doaj +1 more source
TEI-encoding of text reuses in the BIBLINDEX Project [PDF]
This paper discusses markup strategies for the identification and description of text reuses in a corpus of patristic texts related to the BIBLINDEX Project, an online index of biblical references in Early Christian Literature.
Elysabeth Hue-Gay +2 more
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The Royal Prayerbook’s blood‐staunching charms and early Insular scribal communities
The Royal Prayerbook contains a variety of entries aimed at staunching a flow of blood, three of which are related by a shared poetic motif. An examination of the elements in these texts suggests that all three are a meditation on a scene from the gospels, the healing of the woman with the issue of blood.
Emily Kesling
wiley +1 more source
Die manifestering van Septuaginta-invloed in die Sondergut-Lukas
The manifestation of Septuagint-influence in the Sondergut-Lukas It has often been postulated that the Gospel of Luke was influenced by the Septuagint.
G. J. Steyn
doaj +1 more source
A Theology of the Septuagint? [PDF]
This contribution to the Festschrift for Sakkie Spangenberg addresses the question of whether it is appropriate and even possible to formulate “the/a theology of the Septuagint.” To be sure, this author (Cook) has endeavoured to formulate “theologies” of LXX Proverbs and the Old Greek of Job as case studies.
openaire +5 more sources

