Results 51 to 60 of about 12,322 (170)
How Therborn's Theory of Ideology Enhances Bourdieus's Theory of Fields
Abstract Pierre Bourdieu's theory of subjectivity is perhaps the most elaborate within the broad constructivist tradition, and Göran Therborn's is perhaps the most elaborate within the Marxist tradition. These traditions emphasize opposite components and tend to produce different explanations on micro‐cognitive levels.
Matthew Kearney
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A Reading of 2 Kings 18:17–19:9a, 36–37 as a Trauma Narrative
The narrative of 2 Kings 18:17–19:9a, 36–37 (“Source B1”) recounts pre-exilic religious collective trauma surrounding Sennacherib’s military advance against Judah in 710 BCE and its aftermath. In this narrative, the Rabshakeh uses the keywords “בטח” and “
Woo Min Lee
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Qaryat al‐Fāw/Qaryatum dhāt Kāhilim: On the identity of the god Kahl
Abstract Qaryatum dhāt Kāhilim (‘the City of [the god] Kahl’) is the Ancient South Arabian name of the modern site of Qaryat al‐Fāw. This compound refers to the tutelary deity of the city, in this case, a god called Kahl. However, the identity of this Kahl is obscure.
Juan de Lara
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Abstract This essay attempts to address a simple question: what does it mean to hear God? So much hangs upon learning something about hearing God: revelation, salvation, formation, vocation and mission, for example. What is the relationship then between hearing and knowing God?
Graham Ward
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THE PRESECNE OF YHWH IN EXILE ACCORDING TO THE BOOK OF EZEKIEL
Ezekiel was the only Hebrew prophet mentioned in the Hebrew Bible who is called in the Exile. The kernel of his message was that hope for Israel would exclusively be realized through the exilic community.
Pieter de Vries
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The article discusses the issue of rendering the four-letter name of God (YHWH) when translating the Old Testament texts into Russian. The work includes a short overview of the existing translations of the Old Testament or its particular books.
Cyrill Andreevich von Buettner
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In traditional interpretations, all of Job’s children died in the fourth disaster (Job 1:19). However, the narrator does not depict the death of Job’s children but rather the loss of his property in Job 1:19 because his servants (נְעָרִים) are ...
Daejun Jeong
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Religious Studies Review, Volume 51, Issue 1, Page 35-77, March 2025.
Kai‐man Kwan
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Metaphors Realized in Narrative: A New Direction for Biblical Metaphor
ABSTRACT An insight of Conceptual Metaphor Theory (CMT) is that metaphor is more than a mere literary device; it influences readers through cognitive connections. Yet biblical metaphors have most often been studied in poetic, theological contexts and within linguistic rhetorical devices like “YHWH is my shepherd.” In contrast, some of the most ...
Esther Brownsmith
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While Nahum commentators correctly acknowledge that the prophet Nahum’s name derives from the Hebrew root for ‘comfort’, they incorrectly interpret the significance of his name for the prophecy. Commentators usually argue that the name does not fit Nahum’
Gregory Cook
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