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- Volume 76, Issue 2, 2022
NTT Journal for Theology and the Study of Religion - Volume 76, Issue 2, 2022
Volume 76, Issue 2, 2022
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The Legacy of James M. Gustafson in Theological Ethics
Door Theo BoerAbstractJames M. Gustafson, who died in 2021, has influenced generations of theologians and ethicists. After providing a short biography, the present article highlights some of Gustafson’s most influential contributions to theological ethics: his rejection of anthropocentrism in theology, the way in which he connects Bible and tradition with science, philosophy, and human experience into one comprehensive theory, and the central role of piety in his theology. Each of his contributions merit attention in theological education.
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Zwischen Erweckung und Vermittlung
Door Sabine WolsinkAbstractBetween Awakening and Mediation: Dutch Encounters with the Theology of August Tholuck
The prominent German theologian August Tholuck (1799–1877) stood in close contact with several leading persons in the Dutch nineteenth-century religious, theological, and ecclesiastical field. However, recent historiography has hardly paid any attention to the relation between Tholuck’s theology and the Dutch situation. This article discusses how Tholuck’s theology functioned in the context of Dutch theological debates on rationalism and biblical and religious authority. The article thereby, on the one hand, shows how in Tholuck’s theology the dialectic between subjective religious experience and objective religious truth was mediated. On the other, it analyses how nineteenth-century theology was internationally connected.
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Paul, the Rabbis, and the Gentiles
Door Peter J. TomsonAbstractCombining review and critical discussion, the article begins by summarising the successive chapters of Adi Ophir and Ishay Rosen-Zvi, Goy: Israel’s Multiple Others and the Birth of the Gentile (2018). The book traces the development of the phrase goy from its meaning of “nation” in the Old Testament to the meaning of “non-Jew” in rabbinic literature. The apostle Paul is given a singular importance, as he was the first to use the Greek term ethnē in the singular to denote non-Jews, prefiguring rabbinic usage. The two main genres of rabbinic literature are thought to operate in tandem: while in halakhah, goy has an abstract, non-descript profile, aggadah provides it with colour and value, often in a very negative way. In reaction, the article posits that both Paul and the rabbis must be read in their historical context, where social polarisation linked with violence and war played a major role. Paul did not “invent” the goy but used the existing term ethnē in his dispute over the admissibility of gentile Christians in the 50s CE. As to the rabbis, the successive revolts against Rome seem to have gone along with a polarisation process which radicalised the antithetical sense of goy.
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Harald Weinrich, Tempus: besprochene und erzählte Welt (1964)
Meer MinderAbstractAs part of NTT JTSR’s series on Key Texts, the present article discusses the influence of Harald Weinrich’s classic work Tempus: besprochene und erzählte Welt (1964) on biblical studies. It describes Harald Weinrich’s position in the field of text linguistics which emerged in the 1960s and explores its introduction into Biblical Hebrew studies in the 1970s and its remarkable lasting influence in the field of Biblical scholarship, which appears to be more pervasive than in other fields of linguistics and textual scholarship.
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Volumes & issues
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Volume 78 (2024)
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Volume 77 (2023)
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Volume 76 (2022)
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Volume 75 (2021)
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Volume 74 (2020)
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Volume 73 (2019)
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Volume 72 (2018)
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Volume 71 (2017)
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Volume 70 (2016)
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Volume 69 (2015)
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Volume 68 (2014)
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Volume 67 (2013)
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Volume 66 (2012)
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Volume 65 (2011)
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Volume 64 (2010)
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Volume 63 (2009)
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Volume 62 (2008)
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Volume 61 (2007)
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Volume 60 (2006)
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Volume 59 (2005)
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Volume 58 (2004)
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Volume 57 (2003)
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Volume 56 (2002)
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Volume 55 (2001)
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Volume 54 (2000)
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Volume 53 (1999)
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Volume 52 (1998)
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Volume 51 (1997)
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Volume 50 (1996)
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Volume 49 (1995)
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Volume 48 (1994)
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Volume 47 (1993)
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Volume 46 (1992)
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Volume 45 (1991)
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Volume 44 (1990)
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Volume 43 (1989)
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Volume 42 (1988)
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Volume 41 (1987)
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Volume 40 (1986)
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Volume 39 (1985)
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Volume 38 (1984)
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Volume 37 (1983)
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Volume 36 (1982)
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Volume 35 (1981)
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Volume 34 (1980)