The first five books of the New Testament contain a large proportion of all uses of the term Farisai/oj in extant literature. In the light of growing scepticism among historians of Judaism over the accuracy and legitimacy of reconstructions of the Pharisees of history, Mary Marshall sets aside the quest for the historical Pharisees and instead offers an analysis of the portrayal of the Pharisees by each evangelist. The author adopts a redaction critical approach which incorporates narrative critical observations where appropriate. Her examination of the texts demonstrates the particularity of each book and its portrayal of the Pharisees. The five books do not portray a monolithic body of evidence but each has its own style, occasion and purpose(s). All New Testament portrayals of the Pharisees occupy a good deal of common ground and yet the pictures they produce are not identical. Every one of the evangelists integrates the Pharisees into his own presentation of the gospel,emphasisingthose aspects of the Pharisees' portrayal which serve his own particular concerns. This study of material from the gospels and Acts yields multi-faceted portraits of the Pharisees and discloses the variety of christological, soteriological, ecclesiological and ethical concerns with which they are associated. It alerts the exegete both to the nuances within a given New Testament book and to the subtle differences between books. It demonstrates the combination of fidelity and freedom with which the evangelists regarded their inherited tradition and sources. The way the Pharisees are portrayed in each text is particular to that text and its purposes, and therefore consideration of the Pharisees' portrayal is able to enrich our understanding of the gospels and Acts more generally.
The Meaning of the Letter of Aristeas : In light of biblical interpretation and grammatical tradition, and with reference to its historical context
Ekaterina Matusova
bookWriting a Commentary on Leviticus : Hermeneutics – Methodology – Themes
bookImperial Visions : The Prophet and the Book of Isaiah in an Age of Empires
bookThe Synagogue in Ancient Palestine: Current Issues and Emerging Trends
bookYahweh: Origin of a Desert God
Robert D. Miller Miller
bookLike Mount Zion : Conceptual Metaphor and Critical Spatiality in the Songs of Ascents
Wen-Pin Leow
bookCreation, Nature and Hope in 4 Ezra
Jonathan A. Moo
bookHow Prophecy Works : A Study of the Semantic Field of נביא and a Close Reading of Jeremiah 1:4–19, 23:9–40 and 27:1–28:17
William L. Kelly
bookAnimal Metaphors and the People of Israel in the Book of Jeremiah
Benjamin Foreman
bookChrist Identity : A Social-Scientific Reading of Philippians 2.5-11
Sergio Rosell Nebreda
bookDivine Substitution : Humanity as the Manifestation of Deity in the Hebrew Bible and the Ancient Near East
Stephen L. Herring
bookGod's Word Omitted : Omissions in the Transmission of the Hebrew Bible
Juha Pakkala
book